The Inquisition routinely fails to unearth genestealer cults, Chaos cultist, Tau infiltrators and other rebellious elements. This is for two reasons: 1) there simply aren't enough Inquisitors to go around, and 2) standard Inquisitorial practice seems to be 'torture everyone to death until one of them gives me information' (yes they also have webs of informants, but there are only so many people they can recruit personally, and an Inquisitor is unlikely to trust anyone they don't know personally).Brother-Captain Gaius wrote:Nearly a third of the Inquisition is dedicated to exactly this problem, and as a kicker, another full third is dedicated to hunting down regular humans who merely harbor rebellious sentiment. So, being an alien infiltrator trying to foment rebellious sentiment falls under the jurisdiction of two Ordos of the Inquisition whose sole purpose and reason for existence is to exterminate said alien infiltrator.StarSword wrote:Not true. The Vong possess creatures known as ooglith and gablith masquers, which allow a Vong to visually mimic virtually any humanoid race of similar height. Oogliths are for humans, and gabliths are for Duros, etc. Since the vast majority of the SW galaxy's races are humanoid, they probably didn't bother trying to develop masquers for oddballs like the Hutts. Straightforward foreign-language training takes care of the rest. This is shown repeatedly throughout the series, as Vong infiltrators are uncovered from the Outer Rim to the lower levels of Coruscant.
To ID a masquer-disguised Yuuzhan Vong without a Force-user present, you need to use a complex set of sensors to detect their pheromones, body temperature, etc. These sensors are incorporated into the Yuuzhan Vong Hunter combat droids developed in mid-war by Lando Calrissian's latest company. (The Vong actually used ooglith masquers to spy on the demonstration of the YVH droids, but the demo unit detected and killed them immediately after Lando ended the demo program.)
Plenty of Planetary Governers are either incompetent or too ambitious, and so would jump at the opportunity to rebel from the Imperium if manipulated in the right ways. The Imperium's ban on alien tech also means that once the aristocracy of a planet have relatively innocently traded with aliens for toys (and I'm sure the Vong must have something interesting to the chinless wonder brigade) then they are already doomed to a slow, painful and degrading death at the hands of the Inquisition. So they have no reason not to rebel.That's merely the active response of the Imperium against infiltration. I seriously doubt Vong infiltrators would get very far against the intensely xenophobic and brutal Imperial power structures in the first place. One of the reasons that Nom Anor et al did well is because the New Republic was a very open and cosmopolitan society with a strong anti-militant, anti-police state mindset. Vong agents and informants couldn't reliably be stopped because the best the NR had was... the Bothans. By contrast, Vong agents are going to run up against a solid concrete wall of paranoid, xenophobic sentiment in the Imperium. Some outlying worlds with corrupt administration could likely be infiltrated thanks to the Imperium's decentralized nature, but the true power structures (the Administratum, Ecclesiarchy, etc) would be extremely difficult to infiltrate in the first place, nevermind the Inquisition's response.
Furthermore, they don't need to infiltrate the highest levels of planetary hierarchy to seriously weaken defences. The Imperium is generally a horrible place to live, and the vast bulk of humanity is destined to live a short and miserable life before dying of space-asbestosis. Good luck fighting an effective war when the local PDF are on the other side, or the local factorum workers are sabotaging one in three artillery shells. If this goes on long enough then some of the more ambitious aristos will join the movement, and that'll give the Vong an 'in' to the leaders of the planet.
Note that I don't think this will make a difference in a proper war, unless the two sides are very evenly matched.