No, but it could easily be an appointed one in a group like the Resistance.
Ackbar was popular for his past work, and making him an admiral might get a few more recruits or something.
Moderator: Vympel
No, but it could easily be an appointed one in a group like the Resistance.
Ackbar is quite successful as an admiral in the Aftermath series. They wanted to make a cameo, space the cameo and be done with it. But people noticed so they had to fix it in the book, and had no better idea than to make him senile.
That would be my guess, yes.
I am guessing that Acjkbar had a very competent staff assisting him.The Romulan Republic wrote: ↑2018-03-14 07:09pmThat would be my guess, yes.
But then, I've always felt that Ackbar was overrated, and that the EU hyped him beyond what his film performance justified.
If you watch his on-screen performance at Endor, he comes off as basically competent, by-the-book, with a slight tendency towards indecisiveness and timidity.
The Clone Wars gave him a role as a Mon Calimiari general in the Clone Wars. But that just makes it more confusing, because while he performed fine as a general, to my recollections, and certainly proved himself loyal and courageous, the point remains that he was a general, fighting on a planetary surface (or, rather, underwater), not an admiral.
My guess is that he was a fish out of water (pun absolutely intended) as an admiral, who got the post because the Rebels needed Mon Cal support, and Ackbar was a hero of his people for his past services in the Clone Wars. He was good enough to be competent as an admiral under most circumstances, but was actually more suited to ground-side command.
Similar deal as with Daala, actually- a supposedly capable general, who was misplaced by putting her in command of capital ships.
There was Admiral Raddus, but he died as Scarif, presumably (or in an Imperial prison, afterwards).
Possibly, but space combat and fighting on the ground are two extremely different environments, where different tactics and technologies come into play.Elheru Aran wrote: ↑2018-03-16 06:23pm Realistically though I don't see a particular reason to have a rigid division between space Admiral and land General in an universe with cheap space travel like Wars. When you can go from ground to orbit and beyond in literally minutes, it could mean an improvement in efficiency to have the number of top commanders in your military be fewer multi-taskers, particularly in a smaller force like the Alliance/Resistance.
After all, even in the Clone Wars era the Jedi routinely commanded both space combat and ground combat. Is it that farfetched that an officer who starts out as a groundside General may be cross-trained in basic space combat and gain experience in space fighting over time, when the two can be so closely linked in Wars?
This was Ackbar's first appearance in the new EU, set immediately after the end of ANH during the evacuation of the rebel base.The Romulan Republic wrote: ↑2018-03-16 03:23pmHmm, I wonder if that's part of the reason Ackbar got the post. The previous admiral was a Mon Calimari, and died a hero, so maybe there was political pressure to satisfy the Mon Calimari by putting another of their peoples' heroes in as Raddus's successor? Though I guess this would depend on when exactly Ackbar got the admiral post.
Yeah, I don't like them either, but the E8 ICS does specifically point them out / call them that.The Romulan Republic wrote: ↑2018-03-17 04:09pm Nice.
Though I still say that it makes zero sense to call the Supremacy's weird arcing energy weapons HTLs, as they perform nothing like any previously-seen HTLs beyond having a green-colored bolt.
Yeah, this is a problem with the EU at times- they try to "explain" something, or elaborate on something, from the films, and just end up making it more confusing.Vympel wrote: ↑2018-03-17 05:41pmYeah, I don't like them either, but the E8 ICS does specifically point them out / call them that.The Romulan Republic wrote: ↑2018-03-17 04:09pm Nice.
Though I still say that it makes zero sense to call the Supremacy's weird arcing energy weapons HTLs, as they perform nothing like any previously-seen HTLs beyond having a green-colored bolt.
I want to point out that there has been known errors on books to that's been out in mass printThe Romulan Republic wrote: ↑2018-03-17 05:46pmYeah, this is a problem with the EU at times- they try to "explain" something, or elaborate on something, from the films, and just end up making it more confusing.Vympel wrote: ↑2018-03-17 05:41pmYeah, I don't like them either, but the E8 ICS does specifically point them out / call them that.The Romulan Republic wrote: ↑2018-03-17 04:09pm Nice.
Though I still say that it makes zero sense to call the Supremacy's weird arcing energy weapons HTLs, as they perform nothing like any previously-seen HTLs beyond having a green-colored bolt.
They should have designated those weapons as something other than HTLs.
My sincere apologies for the delayed reply reg. Holdo (although some of this stuff ended up being covered in other posts, and is therefore now redundant).
Addressed elsewhere, but this is a bit of an assumption, I think (unless its backed up in EU materials). We don't get anything on Holdo's background in the film, beyond her having been at some prior battle which impressed Poe, and her being friends with Leia.FaxModem1 wrote: ↑2018-03-05 03:47amI mean their lack of military professionalism, which is fitting in a volunteer militia, but militias also work by bringing people you know personally in, regardless of capability if they bring something else to the table, such as ships, guns, troops, etc.
We don't get Holdo as either a brilliant tactician, or someone who leads by example, so we're left with aristocratic dilettante.
Perhaps, with the benefit of hindsight that Poe did not have at the time.As others have noted in the thread, Poe's actions took out a First Order dreadnought for the cost of a wing of bombers. Considering how poor the ranges on Star Wars ships are thanks to this film, it's plausible that the dreadnought had better range with it's weaponry, and saved the Resistance's flotilla.
I don't think either of them is unable to understand the need for long term survival of their assets, based on what we see on-screen. But I do think that Poe is too driven by his emotions, and was using the wrong kinds of tactics for the kind of war they were fighting. Moreover, it wasn't his call to make.Or not, maybe it would have made no difference in the 18 hour slow crawl through empty space. Or, just like Holdo being unable to think about long term assets while in a ship, Poe is too dumb to think about long term survival of their assets, same way that Holdo was.
That might well have worked better, but its something of an aside to the debate over Holdo's performance as admiral.Hence why in my version, Rose and Finn go to Maz and she's one of their stops.
Or, having served with Poe longer, they felt more personal loyalty towards him. Or they felt (rightly or wrongly) that his plan was more likely to succeed (which, I repeat, was not their call to make).The Raddus's bridge crew, those who would be able to see the whole board, joined in the mutiny. Either Holdo wasn't briefing the bridge on what they were supposed to be doing besides kissing their butts goodbye, I mean, 'having hope', or they viewed her plan as so suicidal that they joined in.
As to this, the desertions Rose referred to occurred either before or almost immediately after Holdo took command given the time frame, and thus cannot fairly be attributed to her poor leadership. I believe this point was covered previously.That, and while we don't have a scene of the entire ship's crew running to the escape pods, we can infer from Rose's duties and comments that it was a sizable enough problem for them to put non-security people guarding the escape pods.
Will you address those points?
Or, you know, it would have given him something to do. It's hard to plan a mutiny when you're busy keeping morale up, finding allies, repairing systems, plotting places to resupply, etc. As I said below, it's basic crisis management, in the event of a battle, natural disaster, etc, you keep people busy, especially when they're panicking. That Holdo doesn't do this presents her as more of a paperpusher who has never had to lead troops before.A false plan is indeed a good idea, if only to throw off any possible spies. But considering that finding out part of her actual plan is what prompted Flyboy McJackass to mutiny, I'm not sure it would have done much good.Even if she tells them a false plan, it would give her crews something to do and focus on that rather than panicking and either mutinying, or abandoning ship.
We don't see how Holdo interacts with the rest of the crew. We see only how she interacts with Poe, who she had no reason to humor or regard as anything but a trouble-maker undermining her authority in a crisis.He objected because she came off, both in-universe and out, as way over her head and unwilling to entertain other options. I'm reasonably sure Poe wouldn't have mutinied if she gave him something to do that wasn't just tweedle our thumbs until we die. Giving people busywork that might even pay off later is a common tactic in a crisis. Telling them to shut up and act as if you're doing something will cause a crisis, as we see in a film.
If the First Order had competently executed a pincer tactic, the fleet would have died. End of story. This is not a reflection of Holdo's ability. It is simply the reality of her being hopelessly outmatched.Her plan was stupid, and relied on the First Order not doing a pincer tactic, their stealth transports actually working, their stealth tech being up to snuff against the better equipped First Order sensors, the First Order wondering why there aren't any bodies as they sweep the Raddus debris, or not sweeping the debris at all, not noticing the settlement on the planet, the engine trail to the planet, not sweeping the planet at all, Leia's big broadcasting ring, etc.
Um, no?They were without Starfighter cover for 18 hours, they could apparently risk it. Though again, that's if the First Order doesn't just trap them in a pincer and kills them all.
Holdo's plan relies on being able to survive without fighters for about a day, so this point is moot.
See above.See above.
A "bartender" who has proven to be a valuable source of information in the past, and was known to Han (and presumably Leia?).Note that this is Poe's plan in principle, not in practice. Instead of picking up one hacker, based off the rumors of a bartender, they go to a New Republic base or whatever, and grab hackers in addition to a fleet.
I wouldn't say Finn and Rose are idiots, so much as out of their depth. Finn is an infantry grunt by training, Rose a mechanic. Neither of them has any business playing intelligence operative- another point against Poe's plan.Note that Poe is an idiot, Holdo is an idiot, Hux is an idiot, Finn and Rose are idiots etc. It's what TVTropes calls an Idiot Plot.
Stripping the escorts from your fleet when you have no starfighters to protect against a possible bombing run is not a trivial concern, in my opinion.And I've pointed out why those are minor concerns, or things that are miniscule compared to 'Hopefully someone hears us and gives a damn, otherwise we're eating Ackbar's corpse with dipping sauce first.'
Again, idiot plot here, and internally inconsistent.
I hope everyone likes Calamari with crystal dog because Holdo AND Poe didn't send one of their ships to a gas station to fill up and bring extra back for the other two ships. Or extra ships.
I'll reiterate- if the First Order had been written for maximum competency, the Resistance would have died, regardless of weather it was Holdo, Leia, Ackbar, Thrawn, or Captain Kirk in command. That the fleet would have died if the FO was more competent is not evidence of Holdo's incompetence- its simply a consequence of the disparity in forces available, and the complete clusterfuck that Holdo inherited when she assumed command.Regarding only going straight to planet and nothing else:
Again, extra Ackbar servings for everybody, because they gave up on refueling, finding allies, going to a well defended New Republic system, etc, on the off chance that they get picked up before their broadcast is detected and they get killed for revealing their location, or before they run out of food.
Regarding running somewhere safer:
Hence the refuel, or go to a well defended system options. If those aren't feasible, hiding in a place where you can keep your medical frigate in case of medical emergency or not gamble everything on the First Order being idiots.
Yeah, I know.Regarding New Republic idiocy:
Okay. I am NOT advocating genocide. Okay?
Is it stupid? Yes.What I'm saying is that Mon Mothma's disarmament was asking for trouble, and is akin to South Korea completely disarming it's military after the Korean war if they had no allies whatsoever, and everyone going along with it. Anyone who thinks that utterly disarming next to an aggressive military neighbor to the point that a terrorist group can threaten you militarily shows that you don't care about your people's survival, and are asking for death. And is so hard to believe that suspensions of disbelief gets broken, and one has to ask if the people behind the films are trying to imply that the people siding with freedom are wrong, because in such a situation, they'll be horribly killed.
That view is addressed in the film, of course, through the character of DJ, who seems to have such a view.That's what the sequel trilogy seems to be suggesting, that or that it's all pointless, as it's all controlled by the rich people who gamble away the money while the poor plebes fight and die.
Why would they sweep the planet for survivors if their sensors recorded every ship blown up long before they reached the planet, and they detected no escape craft launching?Regarding Holdo's plan to wait it out:
See above on how that's riding on a lot to go right, and dooms them all if even one thing goes wrong., Like for example, being told that they're on their own, which happened in the movie, and the First Order having a few brain cells to sweep the area and look for survivors on the nearest habitable planet.
And again, if the FO had been competent, it wouldn't have mattered who was in command of the Resistance or how good they were- they'd have been fucked.See above on how many mistakes Hux's flotilla would have to make in order for this to work. If Poe hadn't killed the only competent officer aboard the dreadnought at the beginning, maybe her plan would have gone up in smoke due to him executing a pincer, or searching the planet, just to be safe. It rides on her enemy making a lot of mistakes.
Well, I actually do agree with you that Holdo's plan relies on the enemy being morons, and the rest of the galaxy giving a damn (then again, so does Leia's, and nobody's arguing her competency here).I hope I have properly addressed them now, and show you why they needed better planning.
Tl:Dr: Holdo's entire plan requires that the enemy fleet is run by absolute morons, and that other people in the Galaxy care about them enough to do something. Otherwise, they are either blown up, or starve to death.
Eh. There's a lot of ways you could have written the ST. Some are better, some are worse. TLJ is in this respect a reasonable extrapolation from TFA.Like I said, I was spitballing, and it doesn't rely on an idiot plot to work. Yes, most of the sequel trilogy's problems seem to rest on JJ Abrams and his lack of competent world building, but this wouldn't show just how bad those problems are and compound them, as TLJ did.
That... honestly never occurred to me.Your mileage may vary, as it made me think Holdo was being set up as a surprise villain who was profiting off the war due to her aristocratic look and demeanor towards working class people like Poe. And Star Wars was headed in a class warfare direction.
Yeah, if that's where you thought the character was going, I can see why you'd dislike her. Doesn't mean I agree, but I get it, sort of.That may be why I dislike Holdo, she thematically comes across as a WWI officer, not caring about her troops' lives, more concerned with how pretty she looks,like while also showing similarly dressed people gambling away on casino world. Until at the last moment we find that it's a badly executed psych out, that she was a hero after all.
I would just like to point out a few things.The Romulan Republic wrote: ↑2018-03-26 04:41pm Holdo is an experienced commander with a record of success, who is making an effort to preserve her personnel at the cost of her ships.