PainRack wrote:Thousands including the JUNIOR officers on board the executor and death star. Or are you suggesting that thousand of senior officers were on board the Death Star and Executor?
Oh wait. I forgot. Paelleon in the novel only mentions the Executor alone.
Actually Paelleon mentions how the course of the battle fell to shit after the loss of the Executor and the Death Star. He mentions also that it wasn't until his own ship had sustained serious damage, killing his Captain in the process, that Paelleon took command and ordered all remaining ships to retreat. So yes, it is quite possible that the "creme-de-la-creme" of the Imperial Fleet was located on the DS, Executor, and the task force specifically brought together to defend the DS and the Emperor who was on it. Palpatine himself, in the movies, says that an entire Legion of his best troops is located on Endor during the assault. Would you image that the task force carrying that legion to be second-rate or something? No.
To use a real world example for clarification: This battle was akin to Napoleon losing all of his Old Guard, the elite veterans of his army, at once and being killed at the same time. What would be left would be middling soldiers and conscripts led by incompetents in comparison to their British opposition (Wellington).
Wrong. I'm not claiming that the Elonim doesn't has a blind spot. I'm pointing out that using a mere "blind spot" argument is dumb because military training covers that problem and tries to override it.
Military training does not cover everything. It hardly covers the specific psychological aspects inherent in your racial make-up, which is what Thrawn targeted. Military training can only go so far. You don't like it? Buy a droid.
Humans are afraid of the dark and don't like moving out from cover? Tough shit, that's what night exercises are for.
Fire discipline overrides the normal instinctive nature of humans to shoot first and ask question later, which is bad when you're attempting to set an ambush.
You're under the assumption that a trained soldier will react like a robot in every situation irregardless of an unlimited number of uncontrollable variables. And you would be wrong. Plenty of times when I was in Iraq, the trained soldiers with me would react first on instinct. It often kept them alive.
In order NOT to protray the New Republic as sheer incompetents who would promote commanders of a task force without adequately preparing them, additional reasons need to be inserted. I provided one.
One thing inherent in the Real Life military and an aspect that Zahn touches upon throughout the Thrawn series, is the aspect of political appointments. Officers who have friends or supporters in the civilian side of government that can act on their behalf of getting better assignments, faster promotion, choice commands, etc. It's hardly a far-fetched occurrence. Any officer who wants to get above Captain or Major has to start thinking in a political mindset as well as their normal paradigms.
We already know Intelligence had reports of a task force in the area as mentioned by Paelleon. Further indepth information which was not shown in context could had easily alerted Thrawn to the possibility of such a tactic and the whole TIE sentry line ruse was an attempt to actually confirm such a possibility as opposed to Thrawn attempting to find out which "species" led the task force.
That intelligence you mention would have detailed only a presence as a result of previous data-dump raids that the Imperial forces were pulling in the region. The Republic task force in question was, as told in the book, part of a diplomatic tour to the Obroa-skai system. The commander of the raider force says only that there was a Republic force there, but does not give details. We do not know its make-up or numbers until it appears on the TIE Scout trails, then gunning for the Chimaera. So it is improbable that Thrawn would have any accurate intelligence on the Republic task force before the battle commences.
Secondly, Paelleon is the one who (from his perspective) realizes that Thrawn sent the perimeter scouts to engage the Republican forces to determine how they would react, and by that reaction, gauge who is in command.
It gets even more blindingly numb when other sources tell us that rebel forces are often multi-species in nature, although heavily dominated by humans. Hence, the response of multiple captains and other officers would had obscured the nature of the Elonmin leadership. Its also numbingly difficult to imagine that each species would have been so "unique" that a routine deployment and shooting down of one TIE would had allowed Thrawn to pinpoint which species led the attack. It makes more sense that Thrawn probe was to ascertain whether said task force was actually vulnerable to the Marg attack than to discover the species of the commanding officer.
You are wrong in the aspect of the Republic forces being dominantly human, it is a point of pride for the Republic that so many varied species serve with them, in opposition to the Human-centrist doctrine of the Empire. It isn't necessarily wrong either that a single attack could reveal the reactionary response from a commander, that response being inherently attached to how his/her species enacts warfare.
The Marg Sabl attack formation was only chosen after Thrawn ascertained that it was an Elomin commanding the task force. You have to realize that Thrawn is given a gigantic story-driven power in the series. Timothy Zahn has stated that Thrawn's character is a composite of various historical and fictional personalities, including Erwin Rommel, Robert E. Lee, Hannibal Barca, Alexander the Great, and Sherlock Holmes, to name a few. The sheer amount of intelligence, military acumen, and hyper-analysis that he is suppose to contain make him quite literally a force of nature.
And why would Thrawn lie? A duplictious creature who had no qualms in engaging in pyschological warfare so as to bind the loyalty of the Noghri to him? The use of reward and punishment to bind the loyalty and increase the effectiveness of the Chimaera crew? Is it hence so difficult to believe that Thrawn wouldn't had lied to Paelleon so as to bind HIS loyalty to him?
The real question is not why would Thrawn lie, but to whom and under what circumstances. The Noghri were already a servile race to the Empire long before they came under Thrawn's command, so you can lay the blame for that at Vader's feet.
Reward and punishment is a basic principle of the military establishment and is in no way unique to Thrawn's command style. In fact he is quite unique in his understanding of the soldier psyche. Everyone expected the second tractor-beam crewer to be killed like the first did for his failure. Instead, Thrawn rewarded the man for his inventiveness and flexibility. He carefully balanced and cultured the respect of his soldiers, much like any number of real life generals and commanders have and will continue to do.
I think it is difficult to accept that Thrawn would blatantly lie to Paelleon over something as simply as what this situation is that we are arguing over. Paelleon is Thrawn's protege, that much is clear. While it is clear that Thrawn would keep a few very sensitive secrets to himself and away from the command ranks of his fleet, something as small as knowing or not knowing (using your explanation, not mine) the identity of this specific republic task force (which is pretty small) is inane. Thrawn would have wanted to court Paelleon's respect and understanding, for lack of a better word, and would have included him on the knowledge that pitiful or have led Paelleon to figure it out by a line of reasoning, as he does on certain occasions (again, grooming him for command). It simply goes against what I, as a former commanding officer, sense Thrawn would have done in this situation.