1.) Give evidence of the actual speed and "co-ordination" you claim from Imperial intelligence. Nothing in the ISB suggests that the communication from the Ubiqtorate down to the indiviual system cells is neccesarily rapid -the Plexus description in fact argues against that, given they seem to focus more on "secrecy" than "speed" (IE use of couriers over the Holonet, anonymity of the Uqibtorate, etc.) It's pointless to debate or disprove something that remains essentially unquantified, nor am I going to bother disproving your idle speculation without something more substantial.Darth Hoth wrote: . Second, my point is efficiency within the agency. A clear hierarchy throughout the galaxy will result in much more rapid responses to troubles, as well as (presumably) more co-ordination, than a looser system will. Since you consider "clear hierarchy" a buzzword I will restate the example I gave in my last post, in pointing out that in Imperial Intelligence, orders can routinely pass directly from galaxywide command on Coruscant/Imperial Center down through channels and to individual System Cells on single planets, which can also send information higher up through the Sector Plexus (ref: the Imperial Sourcebook). Does the Inquisition have anything comparable?
2.) "Clear hierarchy" remains a fucking buzzword, since the Inquisition ALSO has a "clear hierarchy" as you care to define it - Inquisitors - which we may liken to the "system cells" of Imperial Intelligence - respond to Inquisitor Lords which often form a sector level command (which I suspect is represented by the regional "Conclaves" mentioned in Dark Heresy.)
At the highest level the is the "Secret Order" mentioned in the Codex Imperialis - the Inquisitions most important members who are used to form a Conclave that examines threats to humanity and forms policy (much like the Ubiqtorate) - they more than likely also choose the Inquisitorial representative that acts as observer and advisor to the High Lords (analogous to reporting directly to Palpy, although they themseles do not bother reporting to Moffs or Grand Moffs.)
Each Ordo (the three main and various smaller like the Ordo Sicarius) have their own areas of responsibility and act independently of the other Ordos - it must be kept in mind that the Inquisition serves far more of a role than mere intel functions, of course, which is both different and more complex than I.I, but the "hierarchy" is little different than what Imperial Intelligence has as per the ISB or any of the WOTC material. If anything, the Inquisition is more like the SEcret Order of the Empire, though on reading the sourcebook, what IT (and other sources) say about Imperial Intel and what you claim it is seem to be two very important things. Just what sources are you basing your assessment on?
Yes, it does attempt to pervade every portion of society. The head of the church is a High Lord of Terra. They have representations typically on every planet, subsector, sector, and so on. They activeyl and aggressively perform missionary work (the Missionarius Galaxia IIRC), and they run the Schola Progenium - schools which educate and indoctrinate the orphans of Imperial servants and provides Guard and Navy Officers, Commissars, Storm Troopers, Assassins, Arbites, and even Inquisitors. They have the ability to whip up frenzied mobs (Frateris militia if not mere mobs) to achieve their goals and wage wars of faith (sometimes even to the point of disrupting the stability and peace of a whole world.) The scope of the Ecclsiarchy's power reached its high point under Goge Vandire - it wielded so much influence under him that they actively sought to limit the powers of the Ecclesiarchy in a way they did not (that I recall) to the Adminsitratum or other organs Vandire corrupted or infiltrated. Indeed, the Sisters of Battle serve a dual purpose in keeping a watch over the Ecclesiarchy for the Ordo Hereticus as well (indeed the Hereticus arose as a result of the Age of Apostasy Vandire incited.) That the Ecclesiarchy today does not have as great of power is because it is actively resisted on many fronts - indeed it comes into clash with the AdMech and its Machine Cult, the Astartes and their own individual cults, and the Inquisition (one example being Ecclesiarchy members trying to hunt down Eisenhorn despite being an Inquisitor, or its ability to co-opt more fanatical inquisitors into its own purposes.) A good chunk of this ends up being covered in Codex Witch Hunters and the 2nd edition Sisters of Battle book primarily, but other sources like Inquisitor RPG, Dark Heresy, and such also contain info about it as does the Codex Imperialis.You apparently missed my point. Which was, is the Ministerium comparable in scope to an organisation that actively attempts (albeit is not always successful) to pervade every portion of society? COMPNOR has formal agencies for working with science, commerce, education, justice, and so forth, in addition to the youth groups/SA/SS/Gestapo functions. I know that the Church is powerful, but in the material that I am familiar with it does not appear to cover all those functions.
Again, have you bothered doing ANY research on your own on this?
The big ones that come to mind are the Isards fighting for control of Imperial Intelligence, and the rivalries and conflicts between the Generationals and the "new" generation of officers installed in the changing Imperial Navy (political appointees and functionaries and whatnot.) as outlined in the Rebellion era sourcebook. Besides which, the encouragement of infighting (Palpy almost certainly had a hand in influecning Isard's coup over her father, for example) pretty much fits in line with Palpatine's views and practices within the Empire. Particularily since Isard was big on rulling by fear rather than by trust or loyalty and was quite vindictive.Wait, what are the examples of major Imperial infighting within particular organisations? Between rivals such as Intelligence and the ISB, yes, but intra-agency?
What the fuck does Trachta have to do with Imperial Intelligence? Do you have evidence that Intel played a substantail role in his downfall? As I recall, he was brought down by his own paranoia and distrust (which affected his cabal) and Palpy's own precog more than anything else, so claiming that because Tractha's plan fell "apart" represents a victory for Intel is dishonest to say the least. Nevermind that I could bother mentioning a numbe of the subplots in the TIE fighter games (Harkov, whose defeat was engineered by the Secret Order, and Zaarin, who successfully executed a coup right under Intel's nose.).Imperial infighting and corruption is typically on the order of turf wars and budgetary competition (the authors of the ISB fairly obviously used Nazi Germany as their model), while in the Imperium there are literal wide-ranging conspiracies in the Inquisition against the Inquisition and the Imperium itself (such as the Hydra from Draco) and whole planets or even larger groups can defect without being noticed for some time. While the Empire has suffered from some conspiracies, they were typically nipped in the bud (such as the Trachta Circle on Coruscant, which was basically Palpatine's plaything from the start) and more importantly, and generally (from what I can determine, at least) they had little support in the intelligence/security apparatus.
Navy Intel is mentioned in several novels as well (Eye of Terror and Hereos of the Space Marines) and I know at least in EoT it was operating at Segmentum level if not higher (the High Lords knew about the events as well as they gave orders to the Segmentum Admiral intent on launching an attack on the Eye of Terror. They'd also planned his assasination for attempting to go behind their backs.) And if the Navy has a large intel network, then its guranteed all the others do, due to politics and such. The other organizations int he Imperium operate on larger scales as well - the Munitorum and IG, the Administratum, the AdMech, etc. can all exercise power which is in theory comparable to that of the Inquisition despite the Inquisitorial mandate (politics plays a big role in the actual power structure - inquisitors have been rebuffed or even killed by members of the other organizations before through politics.) Why would they somehow NOT also have galaxy-wide intelligence networks? The AdMech for one needs such as they are a galaxy spanning agency and must often be involved in the acquisition of lost technology when found given their obsessive stranglehold on technology.My point is that the Empire has its own Inquisition equivalents (Inquisitorius, Prophets of the Dark Side, Secret Order of the Emperor, Emperor's Hands and what have you) while also having ordinary, non-magical, formally organised intelligence and security agencies with effective command and control down to the level of individual planets, with permanent apparatuses in place for fact-sifting and surveillance. As far as I am aware, the Inquisition basically is the Imperium's sole "formal" intelligence and security service on the galactic scale (perhaps one would count the Assassinorum also). Not to say that the agencies (e.g., AdMech) and powerful individuals do not have their own networks, but these would (as far as I can gather) not be of the same scale.
Frankly I do not trust your assessment one bit. You admit to not having had ANY familiarity with the 40K side of the debate, and I'm dubious of your professed "knowledge" of the SW side of the equation - what you proclaim certainly does not match up with the evidence in any sources I own, including the ISB.
Probably, depending on the method of communication. I notice you seem to be operating under the assumption that the head of Ubiqtorate can give personal instructions to any subordinate:Is this organisation also functional in practice, though? Can the Grand High Lord Imperial Inquisitor (or whatever) on Terra give orders to operatives on individual planets rapidly and reliably if he needs to, as Imperial Intelligence can?
REbellion Era Sourcebook, page 73 wrote: The Ubiqtorate consists of anonymous members who never personally interact with their subordinates (except for agents in Adjustments). Directives come from the Ubiqtorate, never an individual director, and communications return via courier, secure Holonet, or other indirect means.
In other words, unless you're trying to use Adjustments as a "standard" example (and they hardly apply since they are ELITE and SECRETIVE "last resort" type agents) I fail to see your argument gaining wait. Again, have you actualyl bothered doing any research before making these allegations? What you're describing hardly sounds like what the sources I quoted above describe, so I'm now wondering what the hell you're basing your assumptions on.ISB, page 26 wrote: The Ubiqtorate oversees all of the activities of Imperial Intelligence at the highest levels. Details and tactical considerations are decided by the appropriate bureau or branch of Imperial Intelligence. The Ubiqtorate never concerns itself with those. The Ubiqtorate formulates strategies for the bureaus of Imperial Intelligence or, as has recently become common, presents the bureaus with a set of goals and very broad grand strategic considerations and asks them to plan an effective strategy. With the exception of Adjustments, members of the Ubiqtorate never have any communication with personnel at the sector or system level. They would certainly never deal with an individual field agent.
The members of the Ubiqtorate are anonymous. They are unknown to their subordinates;
a member of the Ubiqtorate is likely to be acquainted with the identities of perhaps a third of
the members, and to have personal contact with only a handful. When communicating to the rest of Imperial Intelligence, the members of the Ubiqtorate identify the originator as
"Ubiqtorate," never an individual.
I also question "rapidity" and "reliability" on the basis of the ISB as well:
ISB, Page 32-33 wrote: When a message is sent through the Plexus, it is copied and transmitted to at least two different conduits at each link along the way. Each Sector Plexus station is a surprisingly small affair, and while they are well hidden, their security is far from guaranteed. If enemy forces destroy a few Plexus conduits, parallel transmission will allow the message to get through despite the loss. Lower priority messages are sent on less secure channels, and only two copies of each message are transmitted from each conduit. But there are five or more links along the message path before transmission to the final destination, and the message is transmitted to additional conduits even after the message has been received at the final destination. This means the message is routed to thousands of places, only one of which is the actual destination. Even if a message is intercepted, enemy agents have a slim chance of discovering the location of the initial sender or the recipient; the chain is too long.
Sending messages over many links takes time, so higher priority messages are sent over more secure channels and fewer links, but three copies of each message is sent from a single conduit to better protect against the destruction of Plexus conduits.
When copies of a message are transmitted, there can be many reasons for errors — power
fluctuations during transmission, signal degradation over long range, interference from other
beamcasts or star activity. The message may have been interrupted by a message of higher
priority. The computer may receive readings which indicate enemy sensors are sweeping the
area for evidence of transmissions, and quickly stop transmissions.
When the message reaches its final conduit, the Plexus computer assembles and compares all received versions of the message, synthesizing them into the message most likely to be an exact copy of the original. The computer then generates the authenticity code for the message — the more secure the channel and the fewer the deviations between copies of the message, the higher the authenticity code.
What is described above does not soound nearly as nice as what you proclaim. What is your evidence to back up the assertion of speed? At best you can MAYBE claim reliability from that, but I'd like to see proof backing that up as well.ISB, page 33 wrote: Sector Plexus has access to portions of the HoloNet, but most of their information is carried
from system to system on droid vessels. These are small, extremely fast starships run strictly
by CNLinked droids and computers. The ship has a nav computer, a storage/transceiving 12-
CG droid (based on Cybot Galactica's ED4 model), a "ship's captain" R2-M3 droid (based
on the R2 astromech droid), and an analysis/encoding computer equipped with a TranLang
III Communication module. These ships contain no accommodations or space for living beings, nor do they have life support systems.
Essentially the PDV is a fuel source and engine, with supporting electronics and droids
attached. It is built strictly to send and receive Plexus conduit transmissions within a system
and then jump to the next system on its route. A combination of PDV speed, programmed skills and efficient route algorithms guarantee that a PDV never has a jump duration greater than one standard day, except in extreme emergencies..
You haven't presented any evidence, analysis, or anything vaguely substantial or meaningful to back up your allegations. In fact, given how you are arguing this I find it highly debatable you have done any research at all into either the GE or the Imperium, despite the fact you argue and act as if you are highly knowledgable on the subject. What little you have "presented" is little more than a shallow and overly-simplistic assertion based on a few cleverly framed concepts, but ignores any real depth to the issue. At best, its a "highly idealized" conceptualization of how Imperial Intelligence OUGHT to work, but to actually make a case you need far more substantial proof than you have brought to bear.Would you please tell me how effective control of operations galaxywide is a "buzzword"? It denotes a fairly simple concept, and one that makes a fair bit of difference if one has it or does not. And yes, I have never denied that the Empire has Inquisition-like agencies. I have contended that they do not form the backbone of the Imperial security/intelligence effort, which is run by formal military and police agencies; rather, they are specialist groups that work on cases requiring their particular attention.
In some ways perhaps - you do things during wartime you might not do in peacetime, but the GE operates under the pretense of "Wartime" (Palpy trying to extend his powers way past their mark by making up threats) so I doubt that applies. On the downside, wartime adds additional burdens to finite resources - not only do the intel agencies have to add wartime concerns to concerns already existing (society doesn't STOP once a war occurs) and the intel agencies are now competing with other agencies for resources that will further have to be allocated to handle the war (possibly even diverted from other sources.) And doing things like "clamp down on travel", "demand more security" and so on DO take resources to enforce - life goes on even in war (indeed this is something we see in the Clone Wars AND the Galactic civil war - travel, the economy, etc. all continue onwards. Indeed, the way the GE is structured its economy and industry probably would ont welcome the disruption of a large scale war like was seein during the Vong incursion.)I may be terribly mistaken, here, but would not a wartime security effort actually be easier to maintain in at least some ways, given that you can then clamp down harder on travel, demand more rigorous security, and so forth?
We've never seen the GE face the sorts of problems the Imperium faces - threats and conflicts on multiple fronts. For example, within a decade (990-991.M41) the Imperium faced not less than two Tyranid incursions (Kraken and Leviathan), a number of Ork incursions (including the big one involving the Third Armageddon war, which is still in the phases of mopping up), and the 13th Black Crusade led by Abbadon. This is in addition to all the "normal" stuff they can expect to face (minor ork incursions, alien invasions, rebellion, cultist uprisings, Necrons tomb worlds, what have you.) All those myriad threats occupy finite resources and divert attnetion in myriad directions. At most the GE has ONE major problem to contend with - the Rebellion - Palpy in fact had to fabricate multiple threats in order to justify his activities, so the GE is more on a peacetime footing than an actual wartime one (like they were in the Clone Wars.)
And? These problems magically vanish when a war breaks out? Are you telling me civilians will suddenly all compltely stop travelling across the galaxy in their own ships, or tryng to communicate, or otherwise basically trying to live a life? Damn, thats awfully convenient of them to be so selfless and considerate if they do. If anything those factors will only become worse in wartime (even a limited war) given those advantages can apply to the enemy as well as to themselves (nevermind the problems created by infighting between themselves and the differing organizations.) Point of fact, we've never even SEEN the Intelligence organizations of the Empire actually tested in a serious manner, in the same way we've never seen the Imperial military seriously challenged by a real threat - how would this much vaunted "efficiency" hold up? )In the peacetime Empire travel is virtually free (on the low-security worlds, at least) and interstellar communications are fairly easily available. Dirt-world farmers have enough capital to buy starships. Maintaining security in a galaxy of such rapid communications should logically be more difficult than in the Imperium, where interstellar travel is comparatively rare.
It's obvious you aren't even trying to argue this fairly. I question the validity of your assertions on the basis that you have done zero evidence, much less a comparative analysis between the GE and Imperium, and have evidently given zero thought to any of the implications that the research would engender or the ways in which the two situations don't even compare. Don't bother replying ot me until you actually come up with evidence, because I am not interested in idle speculation. I want proof.