Idiocy at the Battle of Yavin

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Post by Counciler »

RedImperator wrote: Neither Dodonna nor Bast thought it was impossible for a normal human to make that shot--Dodonna wasn't planning on having a Force sensitive pilot in his attack force, and Bast didn't know there was a Force sensitve pilot in the attack force when he warned Tarkin. It would have been trivial for Tarkin to overwhelm the incoming Rebels and make absolutely certain there was no way, Luke Skywalker or not, that the Death Star could have been harmed.

Tarkin's command came under attack. Tarkin did not deploy all the defenses available to him. Tarkin's command was destroyed, billions of Imperial personnel were killed, and the Rebellion scored a tremendous propaganda victory. How this was anything but an unforgivable fuckup on Tarkin's part is beyond me.

It's not as if nobody knew about the exhaust port--Dodonna found it in a few hours, so the Empire had to know about it as well. It's not as if nobody thought the port could be hit--Dodonna did, and even if you write off his assessment as pure desparation, Bast obviously thought the same thing. It's not as if Tarkin's attention was elsewhere--he had 30 minutes with nothing to do except watch the clock. It's not as if he didn't have more resources at his disposal--by the official sources, he had thousands of TIE fighters on hand, a hundred of which could have overwhelmed the Rebels before they got anywhere near the exhaust port, almost all of which sat parked in their hangars as the Death Star blew up around them.
Wow... umm, yeah. What he said... :shock:
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Post by Ted C »

Counciler wrote:
Master of Ossus wrote: He may have had command over other groups, but only Black squadron engaged the Alliance fighters.
Hmmm.... if that were true, I wonder why he only launched BS.... thats something to marinate on for a while....
In ANH, Darth Vader isn't technically party of the Imperial Navy's chain of command. He's more like the Emperor's "political officer" on the station. Granted, it would be wise to do what he says, but he has no official rank to give him authority. Black Squadron is his own personal guard, so they will follow his orders without question, but authority over the rest of the station's crew derives from Tarkin, who is also deep in the Emperor's pockets.

Tarkin probably figure on just blowing the moon and then leaving. He probably wanted the remaining Rebel fighters to survive to spread the word of just how badly the Rebels had gotten their asses kicked, so sending out fighters to kill them would go against his plans.
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Post by Guardsman Bass »

According to the first edition of the Star Wars Essential Guide to Ships (and feel free to tell me if the canon overrides this), only the fighters under Vader's direct command were launched at the Battle of Yavin. In other words, Tarkin refused to give the order to launch the majority of fighters on the DS.
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Post by Ritterin Sophia »

Well, Vader is given a military position, but only after ANH, Supreme Commander of Imperial Forces. The Moffs, Sector Moffs, and Grand Moffs took care of menial tasks whilst Vader concerned himself with Luke and the Alliance High-Command.
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Post by Jalinth »

Counciler wrote: The fact that only ONE man has the authority to command a launch of TIE fighters aboard a 900km Battlestation with thousands of fighters at it's disposal.... that is just stupid. But the fact that he ordered them NOT to launch? WTF?!?!? What the hell kind of naval commander is he? ... Oh wait... he WASNT. He was a govorner or something, right? Grand Moff is like a regional director.. not a military rank. <--- Not sure about this)
My take on this is that Tarkin ordered the fighters grounded. So this wasn't a case where Tarkin was the only one with the ability to launch the fighters - but no one could overrule him if he ordered the fighters grounded. Similar to the modern navy where if your top admiral orders the fighters grounded, most people will keep them grounded. Even more so in the Imperial Navy where disobedience isn't tolerated.

As far as Tarkin's rank, I was under the impression that the Moff/Grand Moff was a dual civil/military rank. What military units you commanded depended on what was put under you (my expectation would be that the chain of command is clear - if you are under a Moff, you follow his instructions. If you are under a high admiral, etc... not attached to a Moff's fleet, then his "instructions" are advisory only.) Call him a governour-general in the old style - he commanded a set territory and had the ability to direct the military forces under him. But the home country could send independent forces if they decided to.
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Post by Counciler »

I wonder why Vader was not given any Military authority. He fought in the Clone Wars, and did damn well too. Palpatine knew he had strategic talent, and his ablility to use the Force in his assessment of tactical situations would be invaluable.

Even though Tarkin came up with the idea for the DS, it was a bad move to place him in sole command of it. But as I said already... thats the whole point of ANH.... to show that the Empire was incompetant in there dealings with a surgical strike.
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Post by Isolder74 »

Vader's presence on the Death Star once it is operation speaks volumes on how much The Emperor trusted Vader. i always saw Vader as being ther to ensure that Tarkin does not pull anything with the Death Star. All throught the movie we see tarkin treating Vader like an old buddy.

But if Tarkin turned the Death Star towards and attempt to take over.....
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Post by Ted C »

Isolder74 wrote:i always saw Vader as being ther to ensure that Tarkin does not pull anything with the Death Star.
Yep, Vader's role was to keep Tarkin from getting a wild idea like using the Death Star to seize control of the Empire himself. If Tarkin got out of hand, he'd develop a sudden breathing problem.

By the same token, Vader wasn't in the chain of command so that he wouldn't get any ideas. He couldn't operate the Death Star by himself, and the generals, Moffs, and admirals on board would resist any coup attempt he made (flinging overwhelming numbers of Stormtroopers at him, if necessary).
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Post by RedImperator »

Counciler wrote:I wonder why Vader was not given any Military authority. He fought in the Clone Wars, and did damn well too. Palpatine knew he had strategic talent, and his ablility to use the Force in his assessment of tactical situations would be invaluable.

Even though Tarkin came up with the idea for the DS, it was a bad move to place him in sole command of it. But as I said already... thats the whole point of ANH.... to show that the Empire was incompetant in there dealings with a surgical strike.
A Vader with military force under his command is a Vader who's a coup threat. Later the Emperor might have felt he had no choice because of the threat Skywalker represented, or he knew that Vader would not launch a coup until he found Skywalker, but at the time of ANH, there was nothing that I can see that would prevent Vader from turning on his lord in the tradition of the Sith.

As Isolder and Ted C have pointed out, a Death Star with Vader on board but out of the chain of command puts a check on Tarkin and Vader. Palpatine was always very clever about arrangements like that, setting up his subordinates in such a way so they blocked each other's path to the top. It would come back to bite the Empire in the ass once he was gone and every possible successor was positioned so he had to fight every other possible successor, but that was probably part of Palpatine's contingency plans too.
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Post by Ender »

Vader used a military rank in Dark Lord - while he feels the term Admiral is incorrect, all the military subordiantes address him as such.

I would imagine that for the purposes o serving on board the Death star his rank was removed - he was only an observer.
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Post by Patrick Degan »

RedImperator wrote:
Patrick Degan wrote:This subject has been hashed over before.

The only reason why the Rebels won was because Luke used the Force to guide his torpedo shot. Had he not done so, his two torpedoes would have missed just as Red Leader's missed and Yavin-D would be a ragged band of asteroids. The Rebel fighters clearly were not affecting the Death Star's progress to firing point nor reducing its offensive capability in the slightest measure. Furthermore, TIE fighters appeared on the scene before Vader launched with his two wingmen to intercept the "several fighters" which had "broken off from the main group".
Neither Dodonna nor Bast thought it was impossible for a normal human to make that shot--Dodonna wasn't planning on having a Force sensitive pilot in his attack force, and Bast didn't know there was a Force sensitve pilot in the attack force when he warned Tarkin. It would have been trivial for Tarkin to overwhelm the incoming Rebels and make absolutely certain there was no way, Luke Skywalker or not, that the Death Star could have been harmed.
Immaterial what either Bast or Dodonna thought about the matter. The clear evidence is that the Rebel attack was failing and without Luke would have failed. The Rebel squadrons at Yavin did not have the numbers to ensure the success of the mission, and in point of fact the Rebel force was down to its last four or so fighters, and one of those was forced to break off due to battle damage.
Tarkin's command came under attack. Tarkin did not deploy all the defenses available to him. Tarkin's command was destroyed, billions of Imperial personnel were killed, and the Rebellion scored a tremendous propaganda victory. How this was anything but an unforgivable fuckup on Tarkin's part is beyond me.
Tarkin's command was only destroyed due to a happenstance of luck. Take Luke Skywalker out of the equation and Yavin-D is radioactive asteroids and those remaining four or so X-Wings have no place to land. He put up the defences which matched the scale of the threat he was facing while keeping his reserve forces on standby and proceeding to his primary objective.
It's not as if nobody knew about the exhaust port--Dodonna found it in a few hours, so the Empire had to know about it as well. It's not as if nobody thought the port could be hit--Dodonna did, and even if you write off his assessment as pure desparation, Bast obviously thought the same thing. It's not as if Tarkin's attention was elsewhere--he had 30 minutes with nothing to do except watch the clock. It's not as if he didn't have more resources at his disposal--by the official sources, he had thousands of TIE fighters on hand, a hundred of which could have overwhelmed the Rebels before they got anywhere near the exhaust port, almost all of which sat parked in their hangars as the Death Star blew up around them.
Except even if thousands of TIE fighters had been launched, only a very small number of them could have engaged the Rebel force without any number of their own force taking friendly fire or risking collision with one another. By contrast, the Rebels had only a very limited time over their target and could not support one another defensively without wasting the time needed to make their attack runs on the exhaust port.
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Post by Darth Garden Gnome »

The Rebels destroyed their target through luck, but there was always that chance. Why give the enemy even a slight chance when completely annihilating them was well, well, well within Tarkin's ability? It was a mistake and arrogance to risk anything.

I suppose Vader realized this, having at one time used freakish luck to defeat an enemy mothership...
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Post by RedImperator »

Patrick Degan wrote:
Neither Dodonna nor Bast thought it was impossible for a normal human to make that shot--Dodonna wasn't planning on having a Force sensitive pilot in his attack force, and Bast didn't know there was a Force sensitve pilot in the attack force when he warned Tarkin. It would have been trivial for Tarkin to overwhelm the incoming Rebels and make absolutely certain there was no way, Luke Skywalker or not, that the Death Star could have been harmed.
Immaterial what either Bast or Dodonna thought about the matter. The clear evidence is that the Rebel attack was failing and without Luke would have failed. The Rebel squadrons at Yavin did not have the numbers to ensure the success of the mission, and in point of fact the Rebel force was down to its last four or so fighters, and one of those was forced to break off due to battle damage.
But the attack did not fail. And two military professionals, one on each side, thought it was possible for the attack to succede without knowing there was a force-sensitive pilot in the rebel ranks. For that matter, Vader must have thought there was a chance they could cause some harm (or at the very least, was showing more prudence than Tarkin), because he launched his personal squadron to deal with the threat once it became apparent the turbolasers weren't working.

The fact remains that Tarkin had the means at his disposal to absolutely, positively ensure the Rebel attack would fail at almost no cost to himself, and was warned by one of his subordinates there was a problem, and he did not take the action that would have saved that station. If you had some evidence Tarkin knew it was impossible to make the shot without the Force (or indeed, had evidence the shot was actually impossible, and the first Rebel wave didn't merely get unlucky) you might be able to salvage the Grand Moff's reputation, but as it stands, Tarkin was warned of a threat to the Death Star and did nothing about it, and in the end it cost the Empire its primary instrument of control.
Tarkin's command came under attack. Tarkin did not deploy all the defenses available to him. Tarkin's command was destroyed, billions of Imperial personnel were killed, and the Rebellion scored a tremendous propaganda victory. How this was anything but an unforgivable fuckup on Tarkin's part is beyond me.
Tarkin's command was only destroyed due to a happenstance of luck. Take Luke Skywalker out of the equation and Yavin-D is radioactive asteroids and those remaining four or so X-Wings have no place to land. He put up the defences which matched the scale of the threat he was facing while keeping his reserve forces on standby and proceeding to his primary objective.
He had no way of knowing it and there's absolutely no evidence he did know it. For that matter, we have no way of knowing if the shot was truly impossible based only on one near-miss from the first wave. He puts a handful more of the fighters at his command up, and it doesn't matter who's flying for the rebels. And what was he holding his forces in reserve for, anyway? The victory parade at Coruscant?

All this "if Luke wasn't there" excuse-making is ridiculous. If hitting that port was stone cold impossible, to the point nobody on either side believed it could be done, or the Rebels had employed some unforseen technobabble trick, or a magic fairy turned the Death Star's armor into cotton candy, then you could legitimately claim Tarkin took every reasonable precaution and can't be faulted for the unexpected. But that's not the case. He was warned there was a danger, with no mention of "But only if they have a Force-sensitive pilot". Dodonna thought it was possible. Vader apparently thought the fighters were a threat. Tarkin had the means at his disposal to deal with the threat, a threat his subordinates thought was real, and took no action. Saying Tarkin should be excused for his incompetence because of his bad luck is like saying E.J. Smith should be excused for losing Titanic because it was bad luck they sideswiped the first iceberg they saw.
It's not as if nobody knew about the exhaust port--Dodonna found it in a few hours, so the Empire had to know about it as well. It's not as if nobody thought the port could be hit--Dodonna did, and even if you write off his assessment as pure desparation, Bast obviously thought the same thing. It's not as if Tarkin's attention was elsewhere--he had 30 minutes with nothing to do except watch the clock. It's not as if he didn't have more resources at his disposal--by the official sources, he had thousands of TIE fighters on hand, a hundred of which could have overwhelmed the Rebels before they got anywhere near the exhaust port, almost all of which sat parked in their hangars as the Death Star blew up around them.
Except even if thousands of TIE fighters had been launched, only a very small number of them could have engaged the Rebel force without any number of their own force taking friendly fire or risking collision with one another. By contrast, the Rebels had only a very limited time over their target and could not support one another defensively without wasting the time needed to make their attack runs on the exhaust port.
That would be a pretty devestating rebuttal if I had argued that Tarkin needed to launch thousands of fighters. Unfortunately, what I actually said was that a hundred, a small fraction of Tarkin's available force, could have ensured the job was finished, and even that is a ludacrously optimistic estimation of the Rebels' chances. Another dozen realistically would have done it. I only mentioned the thousands to illustrate how little it would have cost him to do so compared to the forces he had on hand, and to preempt any argument that the Death Star was already defending itself as vigorously as possible (an argument I've heard in previous threads on this subject, though never, if I recall correctly, from you).
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Post by Death from the Sea »

Why didn't they do it like in that cartoon "how Star Wars should have ended"???? and just shoot the planet and then the moon?
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Post by Isolder74 »

Death from the Sea wrote:Why didn't they do it like in that cartoon "how Star Wars should have ended"???? and just shoot the planet and then the moon?
Partly because a gas giant will mostly likely not explode when hit. Why waste the power? Remember this Death needed an hour to charge the Superlaser. an hour rebels could us to escape or launch further attacks on the Death Star.
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Post by RedImperator »

Death from the Sea wrote:Why didn't they do it like in that cartoon "how Star Wars should have ended"???? and just shoot the planet and then the moon?
If I recall correctly, the planet Yavin would have dissapated very slowly, not exploded catastrophically like Alderaan. The superlaser delivered just a shade more than the gravitational binding energy of a large gas giant. It would have eventually destroyed the moon, but not fast enough to wipe out the rebels in the spectactular fashion Tarkin wanted, and probably not fast enough to prevent them from escaping. And there was a time delay between when the Death Star could fire. I don't recall if it was to recharge some capacitors or dump the waste heat from the previous shot, but they couldn't fire one full power shot right after another.
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Post by Almightyboredone »

Well, what about shooting through the atmosphere of Yavin and destroying the moon on the other side? Wouldn't that have made more sense (or just jumping so that the planet isn't in the way?)?
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Post by Isolder74 »

Almightyboredone wrote:Well, what about shooting through the atmosphere of Yavin and destroying the moon on the other side? Wouldn't that have made more sense (or just jumping so that the planet isn't in the way?)?
They might have jumped to a safe location and then went around the planet. The beacon might not have given them data on the rest of the system. Also firing the beam through the planet with its unknown densities and other factors affecting refraction its not a sure shot by any means. How can they be sure the beam will go where they want it too
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Post by Batman »

Jumping this deep in a gravity well=bad move. And you are aware that a gas giant is essenially ALL atmosphere. Trying to shoot through it would very likely have had the same effect as shooting at it. As described by RI above.
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Post by RogueIce »

On that X-wing vs TIE Fighter tangent from before: how many fighters did Black Squadron have? Even giving that four additional X-wings survived the battle (first I heard of it, where did that come from? Not doubting, just curious), we had 30 Rebel fighters, and four (or eight) survivors. Seven were seen taken down in the trench run, so at least 15 X-wings/Y-wings would have bit the dust in open combat.

So I'm wondering if it's ever stated how many TIEs were in Black Squadron to try and see what kind of ratio that gave the Imperial pilots (I'm going to guess that none of them survived except Vader, since Luke, Biggs, and Wedge were overflying the Death Star during Red Leader's run without anyone bothering them).
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Post by Patrick Degan »

RedImperator wrote:But the attack did not fail.
Because of a stroke of pure luck. Because the Rebels happened to have a Force-user who decided to actually use the Force instead of trusting his computer. Otherwise, however, the attack was very clearly on the edge of failure: most of the Rebel fighters had been shot down and they were down to their last pilot. There would have been no time for a fourth try.
And two military professionals, one on each side, thought it was possible for the attack to succede without knowing there was a force-sensitive pilot in the rebel ranks.
Big. Fucking. Deal. The movie clearly shows that the attack was about to fail. I don't know how many times this has to be pointed out to you.
For that matter, Vader must have thought there was a chance they could cause some harm (or at the very least, was showing more prudence than Tarkin), because he launched his personal squadron to deal with the threat once it became apparent the turbolasers weren't working.
And that rebuttal might carry weight had it not been for the fact that TIE fighters appear on scene before Darth Vader launched with his wingmen. Which means Tarkin had actually launched fighters to deal with the threat. Which means more were on standby. Which means Tarkin was not ignoring the threat.
The fact remains that Tarkin had the means at his disposal to absolutely, positively ensure the Rebel attack would fail at almost no cost to himself, and was warned by one of his subordinates there was a problem, and he did not take the action that would have saved that station. If you had some evidence Tarkin knew it was impossible to make the shot without the Force (or indeed, had evidence the shot was actually impossible, and the first Rebel wave didn't merely get unlucky) you might be able to salvage the Grand Moff's reputation, but as it stands, Tarkin was warned of a threat to the Death Star and did nothing about it, and in the end it cost the Empire its primary instrument of control.
I have no interest in "salvaging the Grand Moff's reputation"; I am reminding you of what actually unfolded in the fucking movie which does not lend credence to your argument that Tarkin ignored the threat, nor that the attack was going to succeed without a heavier TIE screen defending the station. The movie shows otherwise. The movie shows the attack succeded only through the intervention of pure, blind luck. Argue against that as much as you like and it will not alter one frame of film which stands as the evidence.
Tarkin's command came under attack. Tarkin did not deploy all the defenses available to him. Tarkin's command was destroyed, billions of Imperial personnel were killed, and the Rebellion scored a tremendous propaganda victory. How this was anything but an unforgivable fuckup on Tarkin's part is beyond me.
Tarkin's command was only destroyed due to a happenstance of luck. Take Luke Skywalker out of the equation and Yavin-D is radioactive asteroids and those remaining four or so X-Wings have no place to land. He put up the defences which matched the scale of the threat he was facing while keeping his reserve forces on standby and proceeding to his primary objective.
He had no way of knowing it and there's absolutely no evidence he did know it. For that matter, we have no way of knowing if the shot was truly impossible based only on one near-miss from the first wave.
Appeal to Ignorance Fallacy.
He puts a handful more of the fighters at his command up, and it doesn't matter who's flying for the rebels. And what was he holding his forces in reserve for, anyway? The victory parade at Coruscant?
No, he was releasing only that portion of his forces required to deal with the scale of the threat he was faced with. And as we see in the movie, most of the Rebels had been shot down or otherwise put out of action. I'm sorry if this fact on film does not suit you.
All this "if Luke wasn't there" excuse-making is ridiculous.
Nowhere near as ridiculous as the argument you keep trying to put up.
If hitting that port was stone cold impossible, to the point nobody on either side believed it could be done, or the Rebels had employed some unforseen technobabble trick, or a magic fairy turned the Death Star's armor into cotton candy, then you could legitimately claim Tarkin took every reasonable precaution and can't be faulted for the unexpected. But that's not the case. He was warned there was a danger, with no mention of "But only if they have a Force-sensitive pilot". Dodonna thought it was possible.
Do you even understand that the Rebel action was an act of desperation? They literally had no other option: either make a last-ditch stand in the hopes of blowing up the Death Star or simply wait for annihilation. And you can keep screaming "Dodonna though it was possible" as much as you like: Napoleon thought he'd win at Waterloo. Few commanders will go into a battle thinking they're going to lose and almost none of them, even if they do think they're going to lose, are going to actually say "we're fucked" to the troops.
Vader apparently thought the fighters were a threat. Tarkin had the means at his disposal to deal with the threat, a threat his subordinates thought was real, and took no action.
And if it were not for the fact that TIE fighters are actually seen engaging the Rebels before Darth Vader launched with his group, you might have an argument there.
Saying Tarkin should be excused for his incompetence because of his bad luck is like saying E.J. Smith should be excused for losing Titanic because it was bad luck they sideswiped the first iceberg they saw.
A Red Herring as well as a False Analogy Fallacy —and one ignorant of the facts of the Titanic disaster, one of which being that Capt. Smith had actually steered far enough south to avoid where ice fields were usually found in that time of year.
Except even if thousands of TIE fighters had been launched, only a very small number of them could have engaged the Rebel force without any number of their own force taking friendly fire or risking collision with one another. By contrast, the Rebels had only a very limited time over their target and could not support one another defensively without wasting the time needed to make their attack runs on the exhaust port.
That would be a pretty devestating rebuttal if I had argued that Tarkin needed to launch thousands of fighters. Unfortunately, what I actually said was that a hundred, a small fraction of Tarkin's available force, could have ensured the job was finished, and even that is a ludacrously optimistic estimation of the Rebels' chances. Another dozen realistically would have done it. I only mentioned the thousands to illustrate how little it would have cost him to do so compared to the forces he had on hand, and to preempt any argument that the Death Star was already defending itself as vigorously as possible (an argument I've heard in previous threads on this subject, though never, if I recall correctly, from you).
And if the statement were meant to be taken literally, that might have been a pretty devestating counter-rebuttal. As it stands, however, it does not prove an argument one way or the other nor does it lend credence to your position that Tarkin was simply ignoring the threat out of arrogance or stupidity or whatever. Nor that the Rebel attack succeeded by anything other than pure blind luck since in the actual movie, it was about to fail.
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Post by Darth Garden Gnome »

Given that the Rebels had not one, but TWO shots at wiping out the Empire's expensive battlestation and pretty much completely preserving the Alliance, shows pretty clearly that there wasn't enough of a defense put up to eliminate the threat to the station.

Even if it was a near-impossible shot, it was foolish to even give the Rebels a go at it. Launching a dozen (or however many) more fighters would've prevented the Rebels from ever having a chance.
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Post by Cykeisme »

I have some speculation to offer..
Perhaps Rebel command's assessment of the mission's chances of success underestimated the effects of the jamming and "distortion" around the trench. This may have been something that Tarkin knew that Dodonna did not.. perhaps new defensive equipment that had only recently been installed? It's possible that some form of jamming was employed that may have caused sensors and targeting computers to be so ineffective as to nearly render a hit impossible. If this is the case, Tarkin's seeming indifference at the presence of the Rebel squadrons may be understandable.

There was some discussion about the distortion actually reducing maneuverability in and around the trench; this may mean that it's actually some sort of gravitic effect (or something!) rather than just signal jamming.



Btw, I'd like to note that not only do X-Wings and TIE/ln fighters have comparable durability in the movies, their acceleration and maneuverability is also very similar. Aren't there scans of notes written by the ILM special effects team that indicate that X-Wings and TIEs are deliberately portrayed with the same mobility in effects shots?
The silly "nippy glass TIE, ponderous solid X-Wing" is an idea that started with the X-Wing games. Pure game mechanics.. the same reason Kyle Katarn can take a beating while stormtroopers go down in a couple of blasts.
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Post by RedImperator »

Patrick Degan wrote:
RedImperator wrote:But the attack did not fail.
Because of a stroke of pure luck. Because the Rebels happened to have a Force-user who decided to actually use the Force instead of trusting his computer. Otherwise, however, the attack was very clearly on the edge of failure: most of the Rebel fighters had been shot down and they were down to their last pilot. There would have been no time for a fourth try.
A stroke of pure luck which wouldn't have mattered in the slightest if Tarkin had put up enough fighters to prevent the Rebels from making the attack run at all.
Big. Fucking. Deal. The movie clearly shows that the attack was about to fail. I don't know how many times this has to be pointed out to you.
Since when is "we almost stopped a force 1/1000th our size from blowing up our planet-smashing battlestation" any kind of adequate performance?
For that matter, Vader must have thought there was a chance they could cause some harm (or at the very least, was showing more prudence than Tarkin), because he launched his personal squadron to deal with the threat once it became apparent the turbolasers weren't working.
And that rebuttal might carry weight had it not been for the fact that TIE fighters appear on scene before Darth Vader launched with his wingmen. Which means Tarkin had actually launched fighters to deal with the threat. Which means more were on standby. Which means Tarkin was not ignoring the threat.
Conceded on that point, but he still didn't put up an adequate defenses. He could have prevented the Rebels from taking a shot at the exhaust port entirely, in which case no fluke of bad luck would have saved the rebellion. Explain to me, if you're in command of a battlestation with only one weakness, why would you let an enemy force get near it when you had the forces at your disposal to prevent it?
I have no interest in "salvaging the Grand Moff's reputation"; I am reminding you of what actually unfolded in the fucking movie which does not lend credence to your argument that Tarkin ignored the threat, nor that the attack was going to succeed without a heavier TIE screen defending the station. The movie shows otherwise. The movie shows the attack succeded only through the intervention of pure, blind luck. Argue against that as much as you like and it will not alter one frame of film which stands as the evidence.
And not one iota or jot of that changes the fact the disaster was fully preventable by Tarkin. The Rebels never should have been in position to attempt that shot in the first place, a shot both sides thought was makable, regardless of how remote the chances actually were. So what if it was an unforseeable fluke that Luke was strong in the Force? Are commanders not responsible for preparing for the unexpected anymore?
He had no way of knowing it and there's absolutely no evidence he did know it. For that matter, we have no way of knowing if the shot was truly impossible based only on one near-miss from the first wave.
Appeal to Ignorance Fallacy.
You're the one asserting a non-Force user couldn't have made that shot. The Rebels managed a near-miss on a difficult shot on their first attempt. The torpedo was physically capable of making the turn. It was only a matter of releasing them at the right moment--it could have been hit by blind luck, if nothing else, and I'm trying and failing to understand how it's prudent to let the Rebels get into position to win by blind luck when even that slim hope could have been easily denied them.
No, he was releasing only that portion of his forces required to deal with the scale of the threat he was faced with. And as we see in the movie, most of the Rebels had been shot down or otherwise put out of action. I'm sorry if this fact on film does not suit you.
So in your view, "dealing with the threat" means allowing the Rebels to take a shot at a known fatal vulnerability of the Death Star and counting on your ECM to make the shot impossible, instead of keeping the Rebels away from it entirely. For that matter, don't have anyone covering the approach to the trench from above, so that a freighter can slip through your defenses and provide cover fire for the attacking fighters.
All this "if Luke wasn't there" excuse-making is ridiculous.
Nowhere near as ridiculous as the argument you keep trying to put up.
Which argument would that be? The one where I think a commander shouldn't let a desparate enemy take a shot at his one weakness or the one where I think bad luck doesn't excuse taking inadequate precautions?
Do you even understand that the Rebel action was an act of desperation? They literally had no other option: either make a last-ditch stand in the hopes of blowing up the Death Star or simply wait for annihilation. And you can keep screaming "Dodonna though it was possible" as much as you like: Napoleon thought he'd win at Waterloo. Few commanders will go into a battle thinking they're going to lose and almost none of them, even if they do think they're going to lose, are going to actually say "we're fucked" to the troops.
Well, you sure got me there.
RedImperator wrote:It's not as if nobody thought the port could be hit--Dodonna did, and even if you write off his assessment as pure desparation, Bast obviously thought the same thing.


Oh wait. I acknowledged exactly that, in the very first post I made in response to you. Perhaps you didn't mean that to be taken literally either?
And if it were not for the fact that TIE fighters are actually seen engaging the Rebels before Darth Vader launched with his group, you might have an argument there.
Point conceeded; I must have forgotten the exact sequence of the battle.
Saying Tarkin should be excused for his incompetence because of his bad luck is like saying E.J. Smith should be excused for losing Titanic because it was bad luck they sideswiped the first iceberg they saw.
A Red Herring as well as a False Analogy Fallacy —and one ignorant of the facts of the Titanic disaster, one of which being that Capt. Smith had actually steered far enough south to avoid where ice fields were usually found in that time of year.
And of course, Smith had no way of knowing a huge ice field was directly in his path, right? It's not like he had ice warnings or anything, right?

Titanic and the Death Star and the actions of their respective commanders are perfectly analogous. Both vessels were technological marvels considered immune to traditional threats. Both vessels had a weakness--the Death Star had an exhaust port leading directly to its reactor, and Titanic had a rudder incapable of steering it out of the way of an obstacle without several minutes' warning. Both commanders were aware of, or should have been aware of, their weaknesses. Both commanders took inadequate precautionary measures they assumed were enough. Both ignored warnings that those measures might be inadequate. Both were capable of taking actions which would have prevented disaster--Smith could have slowed down, Tarkin could have launched more fighters. And in the end, both men were responsible for entirely preventable disasters.
That would be a pretty devestating rebuttal if I had argued that Tarkin needed to launch thousands of fighters. Unfortunately, what I actually said was that a hundred, a small fraction of Tarkin's available force, could have ensured the job was finished, and even that is a ludacrously optimistic estimation of the Rebels' chances. Another dozen realistically would have done it. I only mentioned the thousands to illustrate how little it would have cost him to do so compared to the forces he had on hand, and to preempt any argument that the Death Star was already defending itself as vigorously as possible (an argument I've heard in previous threads on this subject, though never, if I recall correctly, from you).
And if the statement were meant to be taken literally, that might have been a pretty devestating counter-rebuttal. As it stands, however, it does not prove an argument one way or the other nor does it lend credence to your position that Tarkin was simply ignoring the threat out of arrogance or stupidity or whatever. Nor that the Rebel attack succeeded by anything other than pure blind luck since in the actual movie, it was about to fail.
You're right, he wasn't ignoring the threat. I overstated my case when I accused him of that. However, the fundamental point remains: Tarkin's defense was inadequate. Luke never should have been in position to take that shot to begin with. The fact it was bad luck that ultimately cost him his command is immaterial, not when he had the resources at his disposal to make luck completely irrevelant. Since when are military commanders not responsible for taking precautions to cover unforseen eventualities?
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Post by Jade Falcon »

Jalinth wrote:As far as Tarkin's rank, I was under the impression that the Moff/Grand Moff was a dual civil/military rank. What military units you commanded depended on what was put under you (my expectation would be that the chain of command is clear - if you are under a Moff, you follow his instructions. If you are under a high admiral, etc... not attached to a Moff's fleet, then his "instructions" are advisory only.) Call him a governour-general in the old style - he commanded a set territory and had the ability to direct the military forces under him. But the home country could send independent forces if they decided to.
I remember the Imperial Sourcebook for the WEG SW RPG's tried to elaborate on the role of a Grand Moff.

A Moff was a sector governor with a fixed territory and the assets to go with it.

A Grand Moff however did not have a fixed territory and was also regarded as having a 'priority sector' role which meant he could go practically anywhere and requisition men and materials temporarily from Sector Moffs. Basically this could be a troubleshooter, albeit sometimes one on a grand scale.

I'm aware that the canon status of RPG material is somewhat shakey, but it might be true.
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