bilateralrope wrote: ↑2017-11-03 11:16am
The Klingons did succeed in their objective at the Battle of the Binary Stars. The objective being to unite the Klingon houses in a war against the Federation. But they still lost a lot of ships, and they lost their leader to a two person boarding party. That seems a pyrrhic victory to me.
The Klingons showed up divided and ended the battle with a military victory and political unity. In the aftermath of the battle Kol has made himself the leader of the High Council, continued to successfully prosecute the war, obtain cloaking tech and use its distribution to shore up his political base, and have rival houses buy their way into his coalition with a captured Starfleet Admiral. The battle of the Binary Stars might have been Pyrrhic for T'kumva, but for the Klingon Empire it ends with a military victory and political unity under a capable leader. Definitely a win.
As for the dilithium mine, a Klingon force of unknown size defeated a Federation force, also of unknown size. Klingon losses are unknown. 3 Klingon ships* bombarded the mine until Discovery showed up, then were destroyed by a single ship. The dilithium mine remained intact and in Federation hands. The Klingons failed to achieve their objective, so this was a loss.
Sure it was a loss, but that's not the issue. Starfleet's performance is the issue and it was utterly botched. The protective fleet was successfully ambushed and routed or destroyed, which is a not a good performance. Furthermore the planet that is the source of 40% of the Federation's dilithium is so poorly fortified that 3 birds of prey can beat down their defences. On top of that, there are no reinforcements within range of this vital logistical location that can relieve it in time. Only a ship with an experimental drive making a Hail Mary teleport jump was able to reach the planet in time and destroy the three light warships that were on the verge of totally wrecking the source of 40% of Starfleet's dilithium. Failing to adequately defend key resources is still failing to defend key resources if someone with a magic warship saves your ass. This is still an example of military incompetence.
Then we have the performance of the no longer redshirt wearing redshirts of Starfleet. Despite being armed with phasers they are easily dispatched by Klingons with bladed weapons in Lorca's shuttle and guarding the admiral at the totally not a trap meeting. Fighting like a Klingon is definitely more impressive than fighting like Starfleet.
I will concede Ash Tyler gives a pretty impressive performance though.
On to the subject of the latest episode, it was pretty bad. Mudd's able to jack the Discovery with time travel, off screen computer comprises, and a convenient force field (which they really should establish as alien tech in order to avoid the question of why everyone on every ship doesn't do this at any sign of danger but that's probably expecting too much). Far too much is done with brute force writer's fiat (magic escape, off screen super tech acquisition, off screen super hacking, magic force field) although the many deaths of Captain Lorca and using Mudd's greed against him by having Burnham commit suicide were good. The ending though, Jesus Christ.
Mudd's guilty of piracy and high treason as well as whatever all those not happening deaths work out to (assault with a deadly weapon sounds about right). The piracy and high treason should get him a prison term that ends sometime around TNG season 1 if it doesn't get him shot and instead we get the cutesy end with house arrest. So not only have we changed Mudd into a cold blooded killer and super hacker, we've completely undermined the whole "actions have consequences" Battlestar Galactica vibe that the show clearly wants to tap into. Fail.
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