Most of these examples, though, are from time of the Empire or Clone Wars, with Jedi Order being unable to focus their full force on Sith hunt. And besides, likes of Ventress or Starkiller were really seemingly just Dark Jedi bouncers with purely combat training. Maul had Sith title, lore training and Sith face markings, so I'd say he was odd one out.Alyrium Denryle wrote:Even Darth Maul thought he was Darth Maul. If he is only ever referred to as Darth Maul on screen, there is no reason to call him anything else in the script. Sidious gave him the title behind his masters back. Asajj Ventriss called herself Sith when she was Dooku's not-so-secret minion. Darth Vader had secret and not-so-secret apprentices and enforcers who he motivated with promises of Elevation too. The Emperor had backup apprentices in case he had to kill Vader etc. It is not uncommon practice.
Decades? Didn't Dooku whole Sith allegiance (and maximum Anakin manipulation period) lasted about 9 years at best...?Even outside the EU it is pretty obvious what they are doing. Palpatine manipulated Anakin for decades, just waiting for Dooku to die. Hell, I like to speculate that Palpatine arranged the murder of his mother.
As a strategy it works pretty well. Think about it. The actual sith lords send out their subordinate dark jedi minions to perform the dirty work of their byzantine plots. They are directed and thus appear organized. They might even be given or take on the title Darth, explicitly for the purpose of fooling the Jedi, who have not found an actual Sith Lord in over a thousand years, and thus have no institutional memory of what one looks like.
The problem - you are conspiracy of two against force tens of thousands strong. Your only shield is secrecy - so whoever your agent is, it has to be someone able to outfight random Jedi he might meet by accident. Otherwise, the conspiracy is blown and Jedi will swarm the area looking for any shred of data about this rogue force user.
If there is anything making sense, IMO, it's making him deliberately under-trained and saber-less so that Jedi believe he was self taught and let the trail grow cold. Or strong enough to kill anyone who might spot him. Just good Dark Jedi is worst of both worlds - not strong enough to silence enemy, too conspicuous to be ignored. Adding 'Sith' to that is like trying to conspire in USA calling yourself ISIS - it's going to raise so many red flags on Coruscant a thousand years of hiding and sacrifices becomes pointless.
Then there is operational secrecy. Conspiracy of two is good. Three and more is asking for trouble, especially when one of the three risks everything if anyone else learns of hidden others. Even if we assume they do have a small pool of promising candidates just in case, why they would give them Sith Lord title?
They have some information on the Rule of Two that is as old as Yoda, so they assume that when they found someone well-trained in jedi combat that they did not train themselves that this person must be a Sith Lord, particularly because he calls himself Darth to throw them off if captured or if intel leaks.
Then why the shocked reaction? If Jedi knew Sith might be out there, they wouldn't ridicule Qui Gon. No, the movie hints they thought Sith were really dead and the only reason why Qui Gon proposed it was a Sith was because it was someone with evil facial markings able to outfight Jedi Master. Ergo, real Sith Lord. Maul never even talks to a Jedi so they couldn't know it from that source.
That would work in Clone Wars, or in case of being found out, but why would they intentionally give enemy leads on your Evil Millennium Long Conspiracy? And also, if so, where are the backup apprentices of Plagueis? In movies, Palpatine feels like the one and only evil boss, learning real evil mastermind behind everything was killed in off hand one liner would be really bad storytelling, IMO.The minions protect and isolate the apprentice, who everyone assumes is the master, while the master hangs out in the background isolated from detection with a backup apprentice of his or her own.