Destructionator XIII wrote:Darth Tedious wrote:Was Alderaan the main Rebel base anyway?
I'd go with it, sort of. We know the plans were going there - Leia pointed Ben in that direction too.
It's possible that was just a middleman location though; her father would forward the plans to Yavin and she didn't go directly out of fear of being followed. (Also record Alderaan on the message in case R2 was captured - better to give up a middleman than the final answer.)
There may have been a Rebel presence on Alderaan but it certainly wasn't a "main Rebel base". The reason Obi Wan and crew were going to Alderaan is because, as you know, Bail was going to enlist his aid in fighting the Empire, they certainly wouldn't have been there for long. Aside from planetary defenses, including a powerful shield, Alderaan had largely disarmed (we know that whatever planetary navy they had was decomissioned and exiled into deep space, reference
Another Chance).
At the time, as members of the Alderaanian government, Leia and Bail believed that they enjoyed some diplomatic protections from the Empire, but the disbanding of the Imperial Senate countered that.
But, the reason I still say it's a kind of main base is that we know they supported them heavily. Jimmy Smits was in on the stuff from the beginning. Rebel soldiers very often are seen wearing the uniforms of the guys on Leia's ship - which was allegedly a ship of the Alderaan senator, so presmably they'd be wearing their national uniform rather than a rebel getup.
So, we can conclude that Alderaan gives them both political (sympathy in the senate) and military support. (Leia says they have no weapons.... what she didn't say is the reason for that is all Alderaan's weapons are on loan to the fucking rebellion!)
While they might not have actually stored ships there, it seems to do everything else.
I would not say that Alderaan provided political support, as government officials they would have had to be outwardly supportive on the Empire (at least for the most part, disloyal systems did not fare well even before the Death Star was built) and support the rebellion in secret. As I said Alderaan's own ships were dismantled and their weapons were actually stored aboard the ship
Another Chance and exiled into space. The ship and cargo were not recovered or put in use until after the planet's destruction, and it was not much. Although there was a lot of support and sympathy for the Rebellion, Alderaan was a very pacifist planet as well.
Rather, Alderaan was less a military and more of a political target. Alderaan's pacifists opposed the Empire's militarism, and the planet's protection of free speech allowed for beings from different species to voice their concerns via protests. These protests started not long after the reorganization of the Republic when Darth Vader made his first visit to the world as an emissary of the Emperor not long after the Clone War ended.
Now, speaking on the Death Star, it really strikes me as rather silly in an empire with millions of worlds. (Don't worry, some day, I'll make a thread "Star Wars Empire: pathetically small" and get all this shit in one place
).
The Rebellion is kinda grassroots. In that script I was reading earlier, there were a lot of scenes in the beginning, cut from the final film, with Luke and Biggs talking about joining it.
It is "kinda" grassroots, but it also has its origins in the halls of power in the Republic Senate, with the Delegation of the 2000. Deleted scenes from RoTS and the novel depict the foundings of what would become the Rebel Alliance as PAdme Amidala holds private talks with Mon Mothma and Bail Organa.
In the movie, Luke certainly knew about the rebellion and insisted on hating it.
I assume you mean, "knew about the Empire"?
It wasn't too hard for him to get some support from almost random people, like Han. He said he was in it for the money, but he did stick around - if he wasn't already at least somewhat sympathetic to the cause, I don't think he would have done that.
Han Solo, former officer of the Imperial navy who abandoned his comission after freeing a Wookiee slave? Naaaaaaaw.
So, what that tells me is there's enough support for it to be distributed.
Now, I think it *must* be distributed to be able to stand up to such a huge place. With millions of systems, I'd expect there to be at hundreds of major bases. At the very least several more than just one or two.
If Alderaan was indeed a base, it blew up and the rebellion survived, speaking to there still being more out there.
Obviously Yavin IV wasn't just a fly-by-night operation, they appeared to be very well established there. But the Rebellion were also very good at being mobile and moving their bases as needed. Note how well they were organized in ESB when the Empire attacked Hoth. They weren't exactly happy they had been discovered but the transports were ready, the ion cannon was in place, all there was to do was to pack everything and get out of town.
What does this have to do with the Death Star: it's just bad policy. It doesn't make sense to have a huge single point build up to fight a distributed network. (BTW, I also used to find the Death Star somewhat silly when they have Star Destroyers. So it can blow up a planet. Who cares? Star destroyers destroy stars. Hey, I was like 10 at the time. The weird thing is the vs debate has put my back into that... yes yes, I know, planetary shields, lol.)
There was more to it that sheer firepower, the Emperor wanted something that could instill fear and frighten dissidents into compliance, while also giving him a powerful weapon that he could rule from in order to force his own potentially mutinous underlings in line.
Now, maybe DS1 was a mistake that seemed like a good idea early on... but they didn't cancel DS2 when it proved to be more bad than good! Destroying Alderaan hurt the Rebellion less than destroying the DS hurt the Empire.
The destruction of Alderaan rallied beings to the Rebel's cause and eroded support for the Empire, even causing a large number of Alderaanians in the Imperial Military to defect. I won't argue it was a big mistake (and I definitely will not argue that it was an evil act, unlike some people). Meanwhile, Death Star II was going to be a bigger, badder, improved version of the weapon and it would have been far more daunting had it been completed and the Emperor's arrogance not clouded his judgment.
If the Rebellion was still a centralized thing with just a few huge supporters, it might make sense to try again.... but building lts of ships and blockadeing the planets would still be better. Unless you can't trust the crews! The grassroots rebellion might count there more than it would with a DS.
But anyway what I'm saying is a huge Death Star is a single point of failure that can only handle one problem at a time, and really only has one solution to it - blow up the whole fucking thing. If the Rebellion was well distibuted, this couldn't possibly work. One ship just doesn't make sense against hundreds or thousands of bases.
I go back to my earlier point that the Death Star was more for terrorizing populations and overpowering planetary defenses than it was going to be for fighting the rebellion directly. "Fear will keep the local systems in line, fear of this battlestation." Had the rebels failed at Yavin 4, I think perception would have been quite different. That the Death Star was destroyed showed that the Rebellion could actually fight the Empire and had a hope of being victorious.