Justify your statements, please.PainRack wrote:Yeah yeah yeah, labelling something does not automatically make it wrong. The only way the statement could even have an impact on the Empire was if it was senior officers, and even here....... its still a pittance.Oh dear god, it is ZAHN ZAHN MINIMALISM. But it's drizzled in a lovely dressing of stupid. The point is that the most promising junior officers and cadets would apply for positions onboard Executor and the rest of Death Squadron (Since it seems likely that Pellaeon would include the supporting ships when considering the losses). I don't know why you decided that Thanas was saying "senior officers".
Why does it have to exhibit itself in a wider spectrum? Why would it be known in an obscure species like the Elomin? You're assuming that a poor response to a specific tactic is something so widely known that it would be corrected, and that this response to this tactic is something that must be exhibited in a wide range, rather than a minimal correlation. It's also not really a species-wide vulnerability, as they're a monocultural civilization on a single planet. So here's a historical analogy. Was Chinese military science awful, or the various dynasties fools, because of all the Chinese commanders who found themselves at a loss against steppe tribes?Sigh. Did you even read my post in full?Why is training automatically flawless? Why would there be special attention given to a species that lives on one planet and is so minor that a repressive state went unnoticed for decades under the Republic?
My argument isn't that the Elonim don't have such a flaw or that training would have counter-acted everything. My argument is that the description as it stands alone is insufficient because species wide vulnerability would tend to exhibit itself in a much larger spectrum and it wouldn't be unknown. Hence, unless one argues that the Republic simply didn't train its commanders well enough, they would have known of this deficit and attempted to correct it.
The TIE probe wasn't to establish the species, but rather, to establish the commander vulnerability to such a tactic.
It works BETTER than the Zahn statement because it assumes the Republic aren't fools.
Why is this scenario so unlikely? There are 2 million sapient species known to galactic civilization. The Elomin live in such a remote shithole of a planet that slavery lasted for decades under the Republic. I doubt that they are widely known. Meanwhile, why would they have such a situation? The tactic is so obvious that it's apparently rare to use it in battle. It's like focusing on what to do in case the opposing force approaches in full parade-formation, judging by Pellaeon's reaction to Thrawn's order.Oh bullshit. Thanas literally has been using the "PainRack has no idea what he's talking about" tangent for the last two post now.You have no idea what that means. Thanas is not dismissing your arguments because of you the person, he is saying that you have nothing to support your claims of impossibility, insulting your feelings of grandeur at the same time.
Again, the fundamental problem with the argument is that it assumes that blind spot= uncorrectable or unknown by anyone.
Thanas argument is that "why can't it be an extremely rare blindspot that nobody knows about". Something that is exhibited species wide is unknown.
And the Republic military never had a situation where such a defect could pop up either in training or in combat.
Sorry if I punctured Thrawn aura of invulnerability by pointing out that this exploit worked because he determined that the opponent actually had a vulnerability to be exploited, as opposed to being a godlike genius who knew something no one else in the universe knew. That is literally Thanas argument. Thrawn is the sole military expert who realised the Elonim had such a weakness.
Alternatively, Thrawn is the only person who figured this out because he has an unorthodox method of psychological analysis of his enemies. Alternatively, Thrawn didn't know for sure that the attack would work, but figured that the chances were high enough that he could risk it. Alternatively, you're proposing an alternate explanation while failing to support why the current one is so awful.