Serafina wrote:
"Rare" is an incredibly broad category - and so is stating the the Inquisition automatically quarantines all systems whith such phenomena, since they obviously only do so in cases where it poses a serious threat, which is not always the case.
Some cave in the mountains that has a weak barrier to the warp is hardly a reason to shut down a whole system after all.
Say what? I'm asking you to show the physical manifestation of the warp. You know, your statement that the warp is so prevalent in the Wh40k universe that it will physically manifest and damage Imperial warships, making their navigation and power projection in doubt.
Which one?
I have all Dark Heresy sourcebooks and absolutely no idea what you are talking about.
Its the adventure where you have to venture forth to discover a mechanical device which connects to the warp.
You don't get it, do you?
All cases you listed which indicated rapid deployment of forces by the GE (or SW in general) are cases where the troops were already ready, unoccupied and transports readily available and time was of the essence - and you compared that to cases in the IoM where forces had to finish battles or even campaigns, where new forces had to be recruited and time was not as critical as in the SW-cases.
That's not a good comparision - and if you don't get it, well...then you are just plain dumb.
Balls.
Geonosis was an unprepared, hell, uncollected army that's raw. It got to geonosis, began the battle and etc within hours.
I then showcased the Battle of Praestilyn PRECISELY to show how heavily commited, overtaxed, and in this case, unsupported by will of the Chancellor was still able to commit rapidly to the battle.
Hell, that's the reason why I specifically brought up those two examples first. Because they're the closest parallels the SWU has to the conditions the Imperium undergoes. In terms of scale, we then have to highlight the Battle of Cato Neimodia and etc, although none of them reach the billion army strength involved such as in Third Armaggadeon War.
Did is say that? No, i said that you are making invalid comparisions. You are comparing someone who takes a hike to enjoy the enviorment to someone making a bussiness trip - you deliberatley use evidence that portrays the IoM as way slower than it is actually capable of.
WTF? The whole point of the debate was to show that Imperial response time is superior to Imperium response time.
It DOESN"T fucking matter whether the Imperium response time is slower because of slower FTL, overcommitted troops or the General is fucking the triple breast whore of Errotica 6. What matters is the Imperium response time IS slower.
Connor brought up the important point of scale. The SWU doesn't have the same scale of wars and campaigns the Imperium has, that similarly means that their response time would be faster in lieu of this. HOWEVER, we can point to alternatives such as the 2nd Armaggadeon war, VerunHive and etc to show that in general, Imperial response is still faster than the Imperium.
We would then need to compare which situation is more..... akin to the other. For example, the 3rd Armaggadeon war had a response time of weeks if not shorter(the exact timeframe when the Imperium began running in supplies is unstated, we only know the Ork advance took weeks to hit the planet from space.)
A "prepared" conflict with reinforcements pouring in already. Yet, we can show during the Zahn Campaign Republic and Imperial forces responding with combined naval/ground strike forces within hours in response to the Raptor raids. Indeed, they HAVE to react that fast because if they don't, the raptors will hyper out. Similar situations where both sides are prepared and are feeding in forces as rapid as possible, the GFFA still wins out in speed, just not in scale.
Given the rapid production rates of Geonosis, given the rapid time in which Yoda was able to collect multiple battalions and march them off to war in AOTC, we can extrapolate that they have the capability to scale up responses and such commitments would still be relatively faster than the Imperium response. Just by dint of hyperdrive speeds if nothing else.
And as i already pointed out, this says nothing about response times. God, i can't belive that you don't get this. Training on the flight means that they use all the time they have on the warp trip. Travelling slower has advantages on it's own (fewer accidents), making use of them that way makes perfect sense. It is pretty obvious that they are doing that deliberately, most likely slowing the transports in most cases.
And? A good number of tithes have them being recruited to be sent off to the warzone immediately. And to begin the conquest of a new world just as it lands. Delay the trip because you need to train said troops properly, that means said tithe is slower coming into the theatre and slower to hit the battlefield. Is it really THAT difficult to understand?
You still don't get it, do you?
The IoM is mostly geared towards defensive action. That's why it takes longer to free up troops for offensive actions.
Yes, this would also affect them during a war with the GE (unless we are assuming a clean plate), but the GE would have the same problem pretty soon.
Ahem. 100 days to respond to the Nid threat vs the GE ability to respond within days. Endor, Truce at Bakura sourcebook.
Your examples do not show response times in an ongoing war unless you are accounting for the delays i mentioned. If you want to look at an ongoing war, NOT at first-reaction time, look at the Gothic war or the various Crusades. Those are far more representative than your out-of context too-stupid to analyze examples and indicate far lower response times.
Right. The Armaggadeon Wars, the Sabbat Crusade are all out of context, far lower response times. Meanwhile, the Imperial response at Geonosis and etc are obviously not valid...
And guess what, they still worked during the first war.
Ok.... I'm intrigued. I'm not challenging your statement so much as I'm asking, where's the source?
Guess how large a segmentum is? Roughly a fourth of the galaxy (in diameter, not in area).
And that's bigger than half the galaxy? Are you on crack?
Still not sufficiently demonstrated. They are certainly capable of doing so (Death Star, hypotetical superarmies) but the IoM is NOT helpless against it, and the logistics of maintaining one giant fleet are still pretty shaky, at least against an roughly equal opponent.
In a total war between the two powers, the GE is much better equipped to attack in such a manner than the Imperium ability to defend itself.
What makes you think it will be an actual total war?
"Total war" as in - "we have to win no matter what" is not inevtiable in this scenario.
Nice dodge. Total War as in we commit a major amount of our nation resources, populace and efforts.
Let's put it this way.
If the war is limited and over a few systems, while the IoM can potentially commit significantly more powerful, larger forces to such a theatre, the very fact that its a small theatre of ops means they probably won't due to the myriad other number of threats. Case in point? Tau Empire. Empire wins because the Imperium doesn't commit enough forces.
Quotes or it didn't happen. In fact it is really unlikely, since an Exterminatus was seriously considered after the First War of Armageddon (only averted due to Logan Grimnar deciding otherwise)
First Armaggadeon isn't second. As for quotes..... sure, once I find that stupid list.
A repair yard of ammunition plant is NOT equal to an major shipyard.
It IS a fact that the GE has only a few major shipyards. Those are vital, loosing them would cripple the whole empire.
This extends to other things as well.
The only thing comparable to that in the IoM are Terra and Mars - even taking out one of the segmentum fleet bases or famed manufacturing worlds does not cripple the whole IoM (it happened before in the latter case after all).
Except that the Black Fleet Crisis shows that each shipyard is capable of minor starship construction work, enough that the potential warships they can produce would be destabilising to the New Republic. And we see them actually doing the finishing up work on an Executor class star destroyer.
Bastion, with no "major" galaxy spinning shipyards, with Yaga Minor and etc being relatively small players in the galaxy could construct Star Dreadnoughts.
Even the Bothans could construct sufficient warships for the New Republic Navy to consist of a major starship class, the Bothan Assault Cruiser.
We can also point to the Clone Wars and show how despite not having access to the major shipyard industries, the Trade Federation was able to build a large enough navy that it could circuvemnt the Republic navy during Operation Durgelance, and later on, field super-dreadnoughts, construct the Great Weapon for actions against the Republic navy.
I presented evidence that the warp is influencing normal space pretty much everywhere, to varrying degrees. That's why physical, non-living artifacts can draw power from the warp and why plasma reactors work at all.
Enough that it will actually disrupt Imperial operations? I'm not too sure whether you're referring to earlier portions of the thread, but my specific contention with you was that warp space would manifest itself that it would damage Imperial starship travel PHYSICALLY. Not Connor energy interacts with matter, so will interact with hyperspace travel. You have yet to show that such an event is anywhere near the norm.
Let him land on any Lyran world to taste firsthand the wrath of peace loving people thwarted by the myopic greed of a few miserly old farts- Katrina Steiner