Been there seen that... twice in Pantheocide alone.Chlodwig wrote:This will probably lead to all kinds of fun when the current generation notices that they can't step into the shoes of their parents simply because those shoes are never emptied....

Moderator: LadyTevar
Been there seen that... twice in Pantheocide alone.Chlodwig wrote:This will probably lead to all kinds of fun when the current generation notices that they can't step into the shoes of their parents simply because those shoes are never emptied....
Well, that was for two reasons:Edward Yee wrote:Reminds me of the late declaration of war by the USSR on Japan, though it had already earned itself a spot in that initial round in its own right.
Perhaps I should clarify: Americans think that the "policing" job should be in accordance with a fixed set of principles that are more or less aligned with whatever America thinks is correct. That's why they freak out at the idea that morally corrupt nations have any influence. It's not just that the UN is supposed to be a global police force in their view; it's that it should be a global police force as per Americans' ideas of what a global police force should do, ie- uphold American ideals. If you were to take its charter at face value, it should discourage the use of force except in cases where virtually everyone can agree that it's necessary, not just NATO.Simon_Jester wrote:I'm not sure I agree with your take on it. The problem is passages like:
"to unite our strength to maintain international peace and security, and to ensure, by the acceptance of principles and the institution of methods, that armed force shall not be used, save in the common interest"
Which is honestly part of the problem. Not getting into specific cases, the problem with that approach is that you often get two powers out of the "big five" that can easily hamstring eachother (usually Russia or China on one side and the US or UK on the other). This wouldn't be a problem if there wasn't a tendency for one of the big powers' national interests to make them want to block one of the others...it's part of why the UN was more of a talking shop than anything for pretty much the entire Cold War, Korea aside (and the fact that anything actually happened in the UN was Stalin knocking Mao back a notch more than anything...that Soviet boycott of the meeting let Stalin get away with not vetoing the resolution on Korea).Darth Wong wrote:Perhaps I should clarify: Americans think that the "policing" job should be in accordance with a fixed set of principles that are more or less aligned with whatever America thinks is correct. That's why they freak out at the idea that morally corrupt nations have any influence. It's not just that the UN is supposed to be a global police force in their view; it's that it should be a global police force as per Americans' ideas of what a global police force should do, ie- uphold American ideals. If you were to take its charter at face value, it should discourage the use of force except in cases where virtually everyone can agree that it's necessary, not just NATO.Simon_Jester wrote:I'm not sure I agree with your take on it. The problem is passages like:
"to unite our strength to maintain international peace and security, and to ensure, by the acceptance of principles and the institution of methods, that armed force shall not be used, save in the common interest"
A lot of small previously neutral countries declared war on Germany near the end essentially so they could join the UN. The Republic of Ireland chose not to, which was why the USSR kept it out for several years after the war.GrayAnderson wrote:Well, it actually was a successor to the Allies: Being in the Allies was a prerequisite to joining in the initial round, and was a reason for at least a few of the "notional" declarations of war on Germany at the end (Turkey leaps to mind), declarations which had nothing to do with an actual commitment to the war and everything to do with being with the "right" guys when the war ended so they could join this new club.
SpoilerEl Moose Monstero wrote:Going back to the original line about something that can be bombed that will send them mad - and if it is in specific reference to pissing off the Americans, what about obliterating the WTC memorial site, you probably cause more casualties by collateral damage than by levelling the statue of liberty, and you get to reopen what is already a very fresh and sensitive wound?
This is more or less my concern. On the other hand, you could equally well argue, for example, the US's veto has prevented UN censure of atrocities committed by US-backed governments. It's not a one-sided thing. You don't have to think that the UN should be policing the world in the name of "more or less whatever Americans would like it to do" to think that the UN should be policing the world in the name of something, such as the cause of "not massacring hundreds of thousands of people for horrible reasons."GrayAnderson wrote:Which is honestly part of the problem. Not getting into specific cases, the problem with that approach is that you often get two powers out of the "big five" that can easily hamstring eachother (usually Russia or China on one side and the US or UK on the other). This wouldn't be a problem if there wasn't a tendency for one of the big powers' national interests to make them want to block one of the others...it's part of why the UN was more of a talking shop than anything for pretty much the entire Cold War, Korea aside (and the fact that anything actually happened in the UN was Stalin knocking Mao back a notch more than anything...that Soviet boycott of the meeting let Stalin get away with not vetoing the resolution on Korea).Darth Wong wrote:Perhaps I should clarify: Americans think that the "policing" job should be in accordance with a fixed set of principles that are more or less aligned with whatever America thinks is correct. That's why they freak out at the idea that morally corrupt nations have any influence. It's not just that the UN is supposed to be a global police force in their view; it's that it should be a global police force as per Americans' ideas of what a global police force should do, ie- uphold American ideals. If you were to take its charter at face value, it should discourage the use of force except in cases where virtually everyone can agree that it's necessary, not just NATO.
See? That's exactly the kind of stuff I'm talking about. The way the Council veto works is a problem with the UN independent of whether the UN is acting in US interests.Shroom Man 777 wrote:The UN wanted to pass a resolution condemning Iraq's use of chemical weapons on Iran during the Iran-Iraq War, but the US - which was very much buddy buddy with Saddam that time - vetoed it and the UK abstained.
Stuart wrote:SpoilerEl Moose Monstero wrote:Going back to the original line about something that can be bombed that will send them mad - and if it is in specific reference to pissing off the Americans, what about obliterating the WTC memorial site, you probably cause more casualties by collateral damage than by leveling the statue of liberty, and you get to reopen what is already a very fresh and sensitive wound?.
It is; the in-joke is that all the "Saints" lived these good and virtuous lives to gain entry to Heaven and then found themselves domestic slaves when they got there. If they were lucky.Pelranius wrote:Judith, I don't suppose its the Judith from the Book of Judith?
Michael-Lan is playing a very careful game; he's high-wire tightrope walking on several different fronts at once.New York, if I was Michael I'd target more than just New York.
And Stuart has also noted how extremely fragile the alliance is.Simon_Jester wrote:]And all those countries are going to just shrug and walk away from a war that has been declared against all of humanity because the UN isn't running the war effort? That would be an incredibly stupid thing for them to do, so I don't think it's even slightly wrong that Stuart hasn't written it that way.
What I am sayin is that Yamantau club is seriously handicapped without UN running.I mean, I'm not actually sure what you're saying here. Are you saying the war effort would break down without the UN? That this makes the UN a good target for weakening the war effort? Or are you just saying "well, countries need to talk to each other, and they can talk in the UN?"
What would be this new organization? Where would it be located? How quickly you could set up infrastructure?Well, the UN does run some things- small things. As a forum it's valuable, but it isn't unique: if everything even remotely tied to the UN vanished tomorrow, people could just send new ambassadors to a new organization and start over.
Lots of places; the teleconference has been invented, remember?Tiwaz wrote:Everyone can guess where you can address whole world at once...
Yes. You do not need to lecture people about this. It is obvious and simple. However, while cooperation is necessary, cooperation can be achieved in many ways, and the UN is only one of those ways.Armies march on logistics, and even with portal technology HEA is way above Yamantau-councils ability to keep running without cooperation of non-Yamantau nations. Even if HEA was only formed of Yamantau-council armies.
Weeks to months, under the circumstances. Up until that time, it would have to be up to regional alliances to keep things together.What would be this new organization? Where would it be located? How quickly you could set up infrastructure? How are you going to get agreement on how it works? It would have to be negotiated from scratch if you wanted new organization. Guess how long it would take to make whole world agree on terms for that?
You do realize that I said "if everything even remotely tied to the UN vanished tomorrow" for a reason, right? That's a hypothetical example, deliberately more extreme than anything that could actually be caused by the destruction of a single building.You are smart guy Simon, but even you have not grasped what UN really is. It is NOT tied to UN headquarters, blow up the UN HQ and UN will still exist! It is global agreement, destroying the headquarters does not nullify UN charter for one thing.
So... you agree with me; you just wanted to lecture me on how silly I was. Right.Let's be clear, destroying UN HQ would not destroy war effort against Heaven, but it would cause serious issues until things are sorted out.
Good luck running it with couple hundred people at once.Simon_Jester wrote:Lots of places; the teleconference has been invented, remember?
Name other existing global scale forums with as much active members as UN.Seriously, the UN serves a valuable function, but as a building its headquarters is extremely replaceable. As an institution, it is still replaceable, because people can easily improvise a way to fill its main useful role. The UN is a forum for international discussion. It is neither the forum nor the only forum.
Politicians call the shots for armies, not opposite way around. You guys often forget the political aspect of the issue when it is more important than military aspect. After all, USA had it's ass handed back to it in Vietnam greatly because of political reasons.International discussion will remain necessary during this war, because allies always need to talk to each other. This is so obvious I'm not sure why you feel the need to mention it. But the UN as such, as a specific institution, is not necessary in this war. It can be replaced by something else that does the same job just as well, in a fairly short period of time.
Name as efficient method which has equally wide reception.Yes. You do not need to lecture people about this. It is obvious and simple. However, while cooperation is necessary, cooperation can be achieved in many ways, and the UN is only one of those ways.
You forget something, there is no ALLIANCE outside Yamantau-club. They are firmly keeping others out.Remember that this is a wartime alliance. People are much less likely to bicker over the shape of the negotiating table while they are being shot at. There is a strong general consensus among humanity in the story that the war actually needs to be fought. By itself this does not make the need for negotiation go away (both Britain and the US agreed that Britain should receive Lend-Lease equipment; obviously they still had to talk about how much would be sent, and on what schedule). But it makes people far, far more willing to bypass the normal circumstances to get the negotiation process to go quickly- conferences take as long as they must, not as long as the diplomats can argue back and forth over who gets to be the first to announce the wonderful deal they're planning to sign.
It's a starting point, especially for regional meetings where the time zone difference is manageable. Or, hell, just fly ambassadors to a random office building somewhere in the world and have them start hashing things out.Tiwaz wrote:Good luck running it with couple hundred people at once.
And who gets to choose WHEN teleconference is held? USA demanding that it is during their office hours starts with quite little goodwill from people from opposite end of the world.
Umm... what?Politicians call the shots for armies, not opposite way around. You guys often forget the political aspect of the issue when it is more important than military aspect. After all, USA had it's ass handed back to it in Vietnam greatly because of political reasons.
Why shouldn't it be? The reason international coordination is essential in this scenario is because of the need to keep wartime logistics running. Honestly, why not simply assemble an international body dedicated to this purpose and this alone, and worry about precisely what its policy on preserving World Heritage sites is after the shooting is over?Months is fairly short period? And UN replacement again requires everyone to agree to it's terms. Making such agreement would not be quick unless it is made as very short term solution and kept very open.
I really think you're misreading the story. Everyone got the Message; everyone is threatened. Uriel and the supercharged weather attacks hurt Yamantau members and non-members alike. The Yamantau club happen to be the center of the war effort's coordination, but they are not the only people involved in the war and they are not the only people with something to lose if the war is lost.You forget something, there is no ALLIANCE outside Yamantau-club. They are firmly keeping others out.
What bill? The nations on the Yamantau Council, by and large, represent both the bulk of the military forces using in the anti-Heaven and -Hell efforts, as well as the majority of the world's economic might. They are footing the bill.You forget something, there is no ALLIANCE outside Yamantau-club. They are firmly keeping others out.
Guess what it means to those kept outside?
Well, it really does not give huge incentive not to bicker. After all, they are expected to foot the bill but not have the vote.
Not really. As I mentioned above, most of the other nations have a relatively small role in the whole Salvation War effort. And there are other ways to make deals than in the UN.To get where it is now, Y-club has had to make lots of deals with nations all over.
And to get further, they have to make more.
Really, so why are politicians acting extremely politicianlike in the story? Hmm?Simon_Jester wrote:Umm... what?
Look, I think you're missing something here. Politicians tend to behave very differently when threatened than they do when not threatened. In Vietnam, the war was optional for everyone outside Vietnam. That made a huge difference. Look at a different war, one where all the combatants were in serious danger, and you see a different picture. Think about all the international summits and conferences the Allies had during the Second World War. It wasn't easy, and it wasn't cheap, but it was necessary, just as much so as tanks and guns.
Yes, flexibility in looking after their interests.And they did it, because they knew quite well that they needed to. So no, I am not forgetting the political aspect; I'm saying that you seem to have an abstract notion of "this is how politics works" that doesn't change when the facts on the ground change. That's a bad model of politics, because one of the great marks of a successful politician is their flexibility.
Yes, everyone got the message. But only handful of people are called to the club which is center of war effort coordination.I really think you're misreading the story. Everyone got the Message; everyone is threatened. Uriel and the supercharged weather attacks hurt Yamantau members and non-members alike. The Yamantau club happen to be the center of the war effort's coordination, but they are not the only people involved in the war and they are not the only people with something to lose if the war is lost.
Germany, I recall, is not in Yamantau. But their tank division participated in battles.Guardsman Bass wrote: What bill? The nations on the Yamantau Council, by and large, represent both the bulk of the military forces using in the anti-Heaven and -Hell efforts, as well as the majority of the world's economic might. They are footing the bill.
Name one that is equally effective and covers as much nations at same time.Not really. As I mentioned above, most of the other nations have a relatively small role in the whole Salvation War effort. And there are other ways to make deals than in the UN.
Not everyone is equally involved. Look at the share of the fighting that was done by the American and Russian forces, for example.Yes, everyone got the message. But only handful of people are called to the club which is center of war effort coordination.
If everyone is equally involved, everyone must have equal say.
Some of them are. Others get the compensation of being able to sell shit to the Yamantau Alliance, or of simply knowing that out there, there is a group of people who are working to ensure that they aren't vulnerable to unseen forces or eternal torture.This is not so, thus there is no reason for those kept out from the decisionmaking to play by their rules if they are not compensated well enough.
Heh. What exactly are the other nations going to do if they don't like what the Yamantau Alliance is doing?War will not be lost, but that is because Yamantau-club knows they have to give a lot to maintain the support of the rest of the world.
Wrong.Tiwaz wrote:Germany, I recall, is not in Yamantau. But their tank division participated in battles.Guardsman Bass wrote: What bill? The nations on the Yamantau Council, by and large, represent both the bulk of the military forces using in the anti-Heaven and -Hell efforts, as well as the majority of the world's economic might. They are footing the bill.
Pantheocide Chapter 8 wrote:
. . . in this room, the Chairman of the Council was just the first amongst equals. Nations had gained their place in this room in one of two ways. Either they had the military and economic power to demand it or they had simply been in the right place at the right time to earn it. The United States, Russia, China, Great Britain, France, Germany, Australia, Japan, India, Iran, Israel, Brazil, Italy, Thailand and Singapore.
The nations above have quite a bit of oil capacity between them if it was necessary. Moreover, do you seriously think any of the major oil producers are going to refuse them and the war effort? The countries in question could just take the oil if they had to.Furthermore, while Yamantau has bulk of military and industrial might, they cannot turn their industrial might into war economy without support of other nations.
How long do you think USA for example could keep their tanks running if oil producers demanded payment for every barrel of fuel?
That is part of footing the bill.
The Yamantau Council covers the most important players, and the rest can be dealt with via informal and/or country-to-country deals.Name one that is equally effective and covers as much nations at same time.Not really. As I mentioned above, most of the other nations have a relatively small role in the whole Salvation War effort. And there are other ways to make deals than in the UN.
I stand corrected.Guardsman Bass wrote:
Wrong.
Pantheocide Chapter 8 wrote:
. . . in this room, the Chairman of the Council was just the first amongst equals. Nations had gained their place in this room in one of two ways. Either they had the military and economic power to demand it or they had simply been in the right place at the right time to earn it. The United States, Russia, China, Great Britain, France, Germany, Australia, Japan, India, Iran, Israel, Brazil, Italy, Thailand and Singapore.
And how far their own capacity goes? Will they drive their own economy to ground to fuel the military?The nations above have quite a bit of oil capacity between them if it was necessary. Moreover, do you seriously think any of the major oil producers are going to refuse them and the war effort? The countries in question could just take the oil if they had to.
How many members are in Yamantau-club? Hmm? Have you noted how many members are in UN?The Yamantau Council covers the most important players, and the rest can be dealt with via informal and/or country-to-country deals.
You don't get it - they don't need the UN, with all its baggage, rules, and regulations, to do this.