PainRack wrote:Stofsk wrote:
I'm not going to argue that the tactics employed were optimal, but you seem to be implying that Starfleet somehow lost that battle, when they didn't - they actually held it and defeated the jem'hadar.
Which suggests that the Jem Hadar were even more incompetent than the Taliban, not that Starfleet was competent.
Actually, I saw the episode recently as this thread spurred me to watch it for like the first time. Starfleet comes across a lot more competent than you give them credit for.
Here's the thing with their doctrine. Starfleet had no heavy weapons support, no ability to suppress fire, no indirect fire seen in that battle. None. Even though such a large detachment in real life would had machine guns and mortar assigned to it. This ignores the fact that an entrenched infantry platoon would had either dug in or built up defences, from fortifications to overhead cover...
How do you know that they didn't have those things and we just didn't see them? How do you know they had those things at the start, but they broke down or were destroyed by jem'hadar raids or they didn't have enough ammunition for them? The episode
clearly states they had been deployed for a long time and were short on supplies. They also said that they had suffered like two thirds of their force being reduced to attrition and demoralising weaponry like houdini subspace mines. That they didn't have heavy weapons deployed or things like force field projectors is a bad thing, I agree. That's either a logistics failure, or my preferred explanation is that those defences suffered from the same attrition as the rest of the unit did. But it might also be something that the Defiant was intended to correct, but whoops! The Defiant was chased out of orbit by jem'hadar fighters.
PS You mention it later that Sisko was there to deliver supplies, but it was clear from his reaction that the garrison was in much worse shape than he thought.
EDIT Also, the Defiant may have been chased out of orbit before it could even beam down any supplies. Sisko and his away team didn't beam down with anything, and they may have gone down to assess the state of the garrison before bringing in supplies, to determine WHAT supplies to beam down.
which was moot since we know the Jem Hadar didn't deploy any mortars either.
Or... the subspace mines took out a lot of jem'hadar including their heavy weapon equipment. We know the jem'hadar have mortars, or some kind of artillery or perhaps even ortillery, and powerful ones too. ('The Ship') Or they didn't use those kind of equipment because they wanted to retake the base, possibly to retrieve strategic equipment rather than destroy it (the base was a Dominion communications centre; if they wanted to destroy it they could have done so from orbit).
And of course, barbed wire to funnel enemy movement further and other tactics. Now, the subspace mines might explain why Starfleet couldn't entrench themselves further to shape the battlefield, but their lack of heavy weapons support or even their OWN minefield is proof positive that the security detachment assigned to that battle was ill-equipped, ill-trained and not optimally deployed.
They were ill-equipped, from what I believe was due to attrition wearing down their defences over time. What is the basis for saying they were ill-trained? They had been deployed for a long time, too long even, and they were suffering morale issues and fatigue, yet they nevertheless won the battle against a numerically superior force using tactics (mining the entrance to the base complex with mines took out a lot of jem'hadar and the ones that were left tried to storm the position, most of which were cut down) EDIT and they were pretty accurate with their fire too, and were behind cover.
This isn't situational mistakes like what the Galactic Empire did. Its endemic, since we know they were there for over a month. And before the ill supplied gets brought up, remember, the Defiant JUST brought them supplies.
Yeah, they brought them shit like food rations and those sort of supplies. We actually don't know what supplies they brought down, in fact, as I said above, we don't even know if they had time to bring down ANY supplies. Sisko wasn't briefed that the garrison had suffered so many casualties and he didn't know what state they were in. They went from around a company sized deployment to a platoon sized, and that was over a five month period. The jem'hadar landed 'two columns' to attack the base, but I don't know what a 'column' is. It was implied to be a lot of troops though. And you're clearly forgetting how the Defiant had been chased out of orbit, stranding Sisko and his away team down there along with the garrison, with shit all supplies and a bunch of surly, hopeless troops who were combatting fatigue and bad morale.
The first thing Sisko did was get Nog to go out with a recon party and get Ezri to work with one of the garrison's few remaining tech experts to counter the houdinis. Tricorders don't work to detect jem'hadar who are cloaked, but Nog's superior hearing would give them an edge. The recon party was successful, albeit suffering casualties. But if Nog hadn't gone with them, the recon party would have failed. Ezri and Lennier worked on the houdinis and managed to disable them; Sisko then ordered them to be gathered up and redeployed against the jem'hadar by protecting the base. Now you hit on a good point that why didn't Starfleet have their own minefield, or whatever, but I can easily see that being the sort of thing the houdinis had prevented, along with constant raids by jem'hadar over the months. In any case, I don't see this as a huge failure on Starfleet's part, even when the inevitable attack came and people go 'why you don't have LMGs!!!', the Starfleet defenders were sitting behind cover and were accurate enough to take out lots and lots of jem'hadar. Would the inclusion of a LMG have made it an even more one-sided affair? Sure. Although I'd prefer the phaser cannon we see in 'The Cage', but on the other hand I'm not going to go 'Star Trek sux!' over it. This isn't anything like the fucking Empire's failure to protect the bunker at Endor. Because holy shit, the Trek side had a lot of disadvantages that you're counting against them, yet they still prevailed. The Empire had everything going for them; better weaponry, more numbers, the ability to FUCKING LOCK THE BUNKER'S DOORS. And what happened? Teddy bears caused the Stormtroopers to go off into the woods, and the idiot in charge of the base couldn't recognise that the AT-ST pilot wasn't one of his own men.
PainRack wrote:To be honest, it isn't the worst only because Starfleet security/marines get more techno toys to play with than some other science fiction military like the Jaffa.
The easiest way to compare a science fiction military is to compare it to what real life militaries would had done in an identical situation, and then extrapolate what a real life military would had done if it had enjoyed the tech science fiction militaries had. The debacle at Endor came about because of situational mistakes made in command. There was flaws in their tactics, for example, prisoners capture. Prisoners are supposed to be disarmed as well as bound, the Rebels were only disarmed, but this just means that they weren't "elite".
Yeah, except the Emperor outright says they were his finest troops.
As far as a modern day military would do in the AR-558 scenario, maybe they'd do better. Assuming perfect conditions. But I get the feeling a lot of people would give the real life military every advantage without accounting for how the Starfleet garrison was under-supplied and under-strength. Would a platoon of battle fatigued soldiers with bad morale do any better against two companies of fresh enemy troops, when all they had were assault rifles and claymores? Even given only the one entrance to their base?
The battle of Ar-158 and other situation, such as the boarding of USS Enterprise by the Remans just reveals that Starfleet Security do not have the equipment, the doctrine or the training that a modern day military would have had. And to be honest, some see this as perfectly ok, because Starfleet were explorers first, scientists second, security last.
Well you hit on what I was going to say but yeah, they are explorers and scientists first, anything else second.
lPeregrine wrote:PainRack wrote:This isn't situational mistakes like what the Galactic Empire did. Its endemic, since we know they were there for over a month.
Even worse, they're just average troops. The Empire's worst stupidity at Endor could be explained by the "best troops" being the best because they were especially loyal/had ties to a politically influential faction/etc, not because of their elite skills in combat. With the Federation we don't really see that kind of excuse, the poor equipment and lack of sensible strategy seems to be a universal problem.
Rubbish. Not only from what I wrote in the above, but you're taking one single example of the Federation having a poorly supplied unit that had suffered two thirds losses, and somehow making that 'the norm', when that does not follow. The fact that they were described as average troops, rather than some elite force, is a mark
in favour of Starfleet not against. The Emperor said the dudes on Endor were his finest legion. You can't handwave that shit away by going 'well maybe the Empire's best isn't all that good, therefore they don't suck (???)'. That is literally the dumbest thing I've heard in defence of the Empire.