The Romulan Republic wrote:I would say that the Empire pretty clearly had impressive military capability in the Core based on the films. The fact that Palpatine visiting the second Death Star is seen as making him more vulnerable and no one ever suggests attacking the capital suggests that Coruscant was very well-defended indeed, to the point that any rebel assault prior to the Empire's defeat at Endor would have been futile. And I very much doubt that it was the only world so defended.
It helps that the second Death Star can be blown up and that the shields around it can be sabotaged from Endor. And of course Coruscant would undoubtedly have the strongest defenses anywhere in the galaxy. My point was about Core worlds that are less than entirely loyal, like Alderaan. And the fact that the Empire was willing to use the Death Star against it indicates that such worlds usually did not have permanent garrisons, even when there is a question regarding its loyalty.
AniThyng wrote:It doesn't matter if all those military assets are tied down maintaining control in the core - that's why Star Destroyers with their versatility and range are ubiquitous, being the largest ships that can be regularly rushed from one trouble spot to another, while all the heavy capital ships are holding down order, or range limited to local defense or just not allowed out of sight of political control lest they become powerful problems... I mean lets take sector fleets on the scale of powerful core worlds like Kuat or Corellia - thier capital ships probably aren't going anywhere out of sight of very loyal imperial control lest they go over to the rebellion.
the ICS books, though now non canon, make reference to larger vessels exactly as you describe, intended specifically to protect Kuat just before the Clone Wars. In that era they had only limited hyperdrives, barely unable to even leave the system. Based on the TF battleships in TPM being exactly the opposite, extremely long range but extremely limited weapons, I would assume that there was some sort of treaty limitation at the time that allowed either range or heavy weapons but not both.
During the era of the Empire however we see the ubiquitous heavily armed and long range Star Destroyers being used for literally everything, with three actually present around the nothing world of Tatooine. And Han's lack of surprise with seeing them in general, though he was surprised that they were on Tatooine itself, implies that they are a somewhat common thing to run into. But his reference to local bulk cruisers does imply there is something more common used for planetary defense that is much slower and easier to dodge.
AniThyng wrote:Well if we look at the real world, comparatively small terror groups still somehow manage to tie down in one way or another entire american carrier battle groups or battallions when you factor in the necessity of holding the region while the special forces try to find the terror cell and so on. Sure, in the end all you need is one airstrike or a seal team raid, but to secure the ground for that needs disproportionate military strength.
That would be part of what made the Death Star valuable, it would be able to operate without much in the way of outside support.
Galvatron wrote:I'm guessing they were mostly used for hit-and-run strikes against vulnerable Imperial targets, like space stations or production facilities, perhaps in conjunction with rebel saboteurs who would infiltrate the targets and disable their defenses first.
That would make sense, and it would fit Tagge's comments about the Rebel Alliance being dangerous and too well equipped. Sabotage would certainly explain how lightly armed fighters could do appreciable damage. And in general they are basically using starfighters for guerrilla tactics in space. Tactics in which direct strength is largely irrelevant Stealing the Death Star plans was presumably a rare operation, though an unsually effective one. Presumably it also led to higher casualties that limited the number of fighters that were used against the Death Star.
And if Rebels is any indication, the cell at Yavin was one of many and they only really linked up properly for Endor. The Yavin cell was simply the one that was involved in all operations against the Death Star and took in Luke Skywalker.