[SD.net EU Database] Tarkin
Posted: 2015-02-09 01:12am
Mini-review: Tarkin can in some ways be known as the opening salvo of Operation Reintroduction, where many of the older now-separated EU elements are brought into the new Disney continuity. Luceno had something of a knack for brining disparate parts of the EU to fit neatly together, but I imagine his job will be a bit easier if some of the more silly things can simply be ignored now. Regardless it was an interesting read and provided a wealth of background on Tarkin, his upbringing, and his early career in the Empire. Those passages I quote here, broken up into a couple of parts, will focus on matters interesting to debates and other SW-related topics; otherwise I would highly recommend purchasing it yourself and giving it a go.
In context to the timeline, Tarkin takes place five years after the end of the Clone Wars.
In context to the timeline, Tarkin takes place five years after the end of the Clone Wars.
Description of a mystery warship attacking Sentinel Base, the facility overseen by Tarkin and part of the logistics infrastructure supporting the construction of the Death Star.Ch1 pg14 wrote:"What is this thing"?
"Begged and borrowed, sir," someone reported. "Separatist-era engineering more than anything else. The central sphere resembles one of the old Trade Federation droid control computers, and the entire forward portion might've come from a Commerce Guild destroyer. Front-facing sensor array tower. IFF's highlighting moduals consistent with CIS Providence-, Recusant- and Munificent-class warships."
Victory Star Destroyers are back in, just the first of many EU ships which will make their return.Ch2 pg11 wrote:Originally a cramped garrison base deployed from a Victory-class Star Destroyer, Sentinel now sprawled in all directions as a result of prefabricated modules that had since been delivered or assembled on site.
Existence of hyperspace microjumps.Ch2 pg16 wrote:Tarkin nodded. "Keep those hyperspace coordinates at the ready, Captain. But right now I want you to execute a microjump to the Rimward edge of this system. Do you understand?"
A clearer analysis of the mystery warship, an insight into some of the immediate post-Clone War fate of Sep forces, and a tie-in to the Clone Wars cartoon.Ch3 pg23 wrote:"Not as much as we'd hoped to, sir," the tech said. "Analysis of data received by the command center's friend-or-foe indicator confirms that the capital ship is a downsized version of a Separatist Providence-class cruiser-carrier, modified with moduals taken from CIS frigates and destroyers. Ships of the sort made a name for themselves during the war by jamming signals and destroying HoloNet relays. Parts of the ship's sensor array tower, which the Seps usually mounted aft rather than forward, appear to have come from the cruiser Lucid Voice, which saw action at Quell, Ryloth, and in a couple of other contested systmes."
Tarkin frowned. "How did the approrpriation teams manage to miss confiscating that ship?"
"They didn't, sir. Records show that the Lucid Voice was dismantled at the Bilbringi shipyards four years ago."
Tarkin considered that. "In other words, some components of that vessel went missing."
"Lost, stolen, sold, it's impossible to say. Other sections of the warship appear to have come form the Invincible."
Tarkin didn't bother to mask his surprise. "That was Separatist Admiral Trench's ship - destroyed during the Battle of Christophsis."
Interesting commentary on the early stages of the DS' development. Even high-ranking officials are unsure of the origin of the station, and it appears secrecy concerns were given priority over the potential efficency of having a more centralized oversight system in place.Ch3 pg27-28 wrote:If establishing the identity of Sentinel's enemies was already proving daunting, getting to the truth of the battle station's origins was nearly impossible. Everyone from celebrated ship designers to gifted engineers wanted to take credit for the superweapon. Tarkin himself had discussed the need for such a weapon with the Emperor long before the end of the Clone Wars. But no one outside the emperor knew the full history of the moonlet-sized project. Some claimed that it had begun as a Separatist weapon designed by Geonosian Archduke Poggle the Lesser's hive colony for Count Dooku and the Confederacy of Independent Systems. But if that was the case, the plans had to have somehow fallen into Republic hands before the Clone Wars ended, because the weapon's spherical shell and laser-focusing dish were already in the works by the time Tarkin first set eyes on it following his promotion to the rank of Moff - escorted to Geonosis in utmost secrecy by the Emperor himself.
All the same, he had no compelling reason to solve the enigma of the battle station's beginnings. What bothered him was that, compliant with a strategy that no base commander - Moff, admiral or general - should have unrestricted access to information regarding shipments, scheduling, or construction progress, no single person was in charge of the project, unless of course the Emperor was considered to be that person. But the Emperor's visits had been few and far between, and it was anyone's guess just how much information was getting past the Imperial Ruling Council the Moffs and others answered to and actually reaching the Emperor's ear. Certainly he was being briefed, but briefings were no longer enough. The project had reached a point where it had to rely on countless suppliers; and though each was being kept in the dark regarding the final destination of their contributions, millions of beings, perhaps tens of millions of beings galaxywide, were now involved with the battle station in one capacity or another. Yes, the project required the on-site presence of a think tank of scientists, weapons specailists, and habitat architects, but what did any of them know about protecting the station from saboteurs?
If Tarkin had his way, and at this point it was uncertain he ever would, he would adopt the hegemonic arrangement that was in place on Coruscant and elsewhere, and appoint an overseer to coordinate all construction and defense considerations. A single overseer to whome others would answer - or be damned if they didn't.
An examination of the unique ship Tarkin is able to procure for himself, it will play a prominent role in the story.Ch5 pg47 wrote:At just under 150 meters in length, the corvette fit neatly between the old Judicial cruisers and Corellian Engineering's new-generation frigates. Heavily armed with turbolasers, ion cannons, and proton torpedo tubes, and featuring a Class One hyperdrive that made it the fastest ship in the Imperial Navy, the Carrion Spike had been designed specifically for him - and to meet many of his personal specifications - by Sienar Fleet Systems. Based on a prototype stealth corvette that had been introducted during the Clone Wars at the Battle of Christophsis to counter Separatist Admiral Trench's blockade of the planet, the triangular-shaped ship was unique in having cloak technology. Powered by rare stygium crystals, the stealth system rendered the ship essentially invisible to ordinary scanners.
...
Tarkin nodded and replaced him in the command chair, running his hands over the instruments as he settled in. The Carrion Spike's ion turbine sublight array, countermeasures suite, and navicomputer were also state-of-the-art, the latter allowing the ship to make the jump from Sentinel Base to Coruscant without exiting hyperspace to retrieve routing data from relay stations or primitive hyperwave beacons.
It just isn't a Star Wars novel involving Vader if he doesn't kill someone in a horrible manner through telekinetically attacking their organs.Ch7 pg71 wrote:But it was the Twi'lek prefect, standing not a meter from the Dark Lord, who unexpectedly gasped and brought his hands to his chest as if he had just taken a spear to the heart. Phoca Soot's lekku shot straight out from the sides of his head as if he were being electrocuted, and he collapsed to his knees in obvious agony, his breath caught in his throat and blood vessels in his head-tails beginning to rupture. His eyes glazed over and his red skin began to pale; then his arms flew back from his chest as if in an act of desperate supplication, and he tipped backward, the left side of his head slamming hard against the blood-slicked floor.
While obviously more publically known, just as with the Death Star Vader is clouded in mystery, although Tarkin has been able to work out the truth.Ch7 pg73 wrote:It was that genuflecting obedience, the steadfast devotion to execute whatever task the Emperor assigned, that had given rise to so many rumours about Vader: that he was a counterpart to the Confederacy's General Grievous the Emperor had been holding in reserve; that he was an augmented human or near-human who had been trained or had trained himself in the ancient dark arts of the Sith; that he was nothing more than a monster fashioned in some clandestine laboratory. Many believed that the Emperor's willingness to grant so much authority to such a being heralded the shape of things to come, for it was beyond dispute that Vader was the Emperor's first terror weapon.
Tarkin didn't always agree with Vader's methods for dealing with those who opposed the Emperor, but he held the Dark Lord in high esteem, and he hoped Vader felt the same toward him. Very early on in their partnership - soon after both had been introduced to the secret mobile battle station - Tarkin grew convinced that Vader knew him much better than he let on, and that behind the bulging lenses of his face mask, whatever remained of Vader's human eyes regarded him with clear recognition. More than anything else it was those initial feelings that had provided Tarkin with his first suspicion as to Vader's identity. Later, observing the rapport the Dark Lord shared with the stormtroopers who supported him, and the technique he displayed in wielding his crimson lightsaber, Tarkin grew more and more convinced his suspicions were right.
Vader might very well be Jedi Knight Anakin Skywalker, whom Tarkin had fought beside during the Clone Wars, and for whom he had developed a grudging appreciation.
Some information about the upper echelons of the Imperial government, again much of it pulled from the old EU. Competition between Imperial agencies will play another important role in the story.Ch8 pg80 wrote:Tarkin arrived by means of the more public turbolift, entering the vast room to find nearly a dozen people waiting, all of whom he knew or recognized, loosely divided into three groups that made up the Empire's uppermost tiers. First, and positioned closet to the podium, was the Ruling Council, represented just then by Ars Dango, Sate Pestage, and Janus Greejatus, all three dressed in baggy costumes of riotous color and floppy hats more befitting a night at the Coruscant Opera. More or less on equal footing, the two other groups were made up of members of the Imperial Security Bureau and the more recently created Naval Intelligence Agency, with Harus Ison and Colonel Wullf Yularen speaking for the former, and Vice Admirals Rancit and Screed for the latter. Feeling the odd man out, Tarkin gravitated to where Mas Amedda and Darth Vader were standing, off to one side of the podium.
Tarkin acknowledged his military comrades with a friendly nod to each. Some he had known since his academy days; others he had served with during the Clone Wars. Interestingly, the Emperor's advisors were also a kind of clique, having attached themselves to the Emperor since his early years as an untested senator from Naboo. Perhaps their outlandish garb was in some sense a tribute to the sartorial extravagance of Naboo's nobility. Even those who should have known better tended to dismiss Dangor, Greejatus, and Pestage as sycophants, when in fact members of the Ruling Council oversaw the everyday affairs of the Empire and wielded wide-ranging and sometimes menacing powers. Even the Empire's twenty Moffs were obligated to answer to the Imperial cadre.
More commentary on the post-Clone Wars situation, including the confirmation that not everything was neatly tied up with the shut-down order was given during RotS.Ch8 pg85 wrote:"The Separatist war machines were shut down," Dangor went on. "Their droid warships were confiscated or destroyed."
"Most were," Tarkin said. "Clearly, some escaped our notice or were made available by insiders to a host of new enemies."
Ison glared at him. "Are you accusing ISB-"
"Review my report," Tarkin said, cutting him off.
"Furthermore, not every Separatist warship was crewed by droids," Rancit said. "As Governor Tarkin can attest, our navy was still chasing Separatist holdouts as late as a year ago."
This is a flashback to a meeting between Tarkin, when he was Governor of his homeworld Eriadu, and Count Dooku, trying to get him to join the CIS. Besides other EU info reintroduced in the surrounding text such as the role Eriadu played in the local sector, this specific passage brings back the total number of Jedi present prior to the Clone Wars.Ch9 pg99 wrote:Tarkin tried to decipher the count's inference. "One might almost conclude that you're positing an advantage to going to war. But how would that work? The volunteer security forces of the Confederate worlds against - what, Judicials and ten thousand of your former Jedi brethren?"
Dooku adopted an arrogant expression. "Don't be too surprised, Governor, if the Republic has access to secret forces."
Tarkin regarded him in open astonishment. "Mercenaries?"
"Proxies is perhaps a more accurate term."
This was perhaps the most surprising passage I read in the book, especially since I had never heard of such a thing in prior EU sources. There are obviously a number of implications for this revelation though. Presumably Sidious had learned of the shrine's existence from Plagieus, but it's a wonder the old Jedi decided to simply seal the shrine away rather than permanently destroy it. Given the reading of the text, dark side influence seeping from the shrine was weakening the Jedi much the same way the "shroud of the dark side" was weakening them during the Clone Wars, and indeed this effect may have been accounted for in the Sith's revenge planning. This could account for some of the poor showings the Jedi display during the Clone Wars, although I wouldn't regard it as a blanket excuse nor would I view the Jedi during this time being as weak as some others might.Ch9 pg101 wrote:The two of them were in Sidious' lair, a small rock-walle enclosure beneath the deepest of the Palace's several sublevels that had once been an ancient Sith shrine. That the Jedi had raised their Temple over the shrine had for a thousand years been one of the most closely guarded secrets of those Sith Lords who had perpetuated and implemented the revenge strategy of the Jedi Order's founders. Even the most powerful of Dark Side Adepts believed that shrines of the sort existed only on Sith worlds remote from Coruscant, and even the most powerful of Jedi believed that the power inherent in the shrine had been neutralized and successfully capped. In truth, that power had seeped upward and outward since its entombment, infiltrating the hallways and rooms above, and weakening the Jedi Order much as the Sith Masters themselves had secretly infiltrated the corridors of political power and toppled the Republic.
Save for Sidious, no sentient being in close to five thousand years had set foot in the shrine. The room's excavation and restoration had been carried out by machines under the supervision of 11-4D. Even Vader was unaware of the shrine's existence. But it was here that they would one day work together the way Sidious and Plagueis had to coax from the dark side its final secrets.