If Poe had reason to believe that, sure, his actions become much more reasonable. But that's purely speculative, and everything we see suggests that the NR is very undergunned and folded very fast. The writing was probably already on the wall.ray245 wrote: ↑2019-03-25 06:37pmIf Poe is making the assumption that they can get reinforcements from the NR fleet remnants, then it is a decent strategic victory as well. The remnants of the NR need to avoid a fleet-killer at all cost.The Romulan Republic wrote: ↑2019-03-25 06:32pmThis is a frequent argument from the "Poe did no wrong, Holdo sucks" crowd- but it misses a very important point, which Crazedwraith brought up.Crazedwraith wrote: ↑2019-03-25 03:21pm
It's tactically good but strategically pointless. It delayed their escape from the attacking fleet, their main goal and the FO so outnumbers that one ship, even a dreadnought isn't going to make a difference in the long run.
Bottom line is, what Poe did (ignoring for the moment that it was in direct violation of orders) was tactically brilliant, and strategically idiotic. In an insurgency or guerilla warfare, where you cannot match the enemy in open battle, you rely on staying out of sight, engaging in hit and run attacks on vulnerable, less-defended targets. You don't try to go head-to-head in the open with the enemy's heaviest units in conventional battle. Leia doubtless knows this, because she spent about ten years working in an insurgency/guerilla army before the Resistance was ever formed.
Poe was trying to fight the First Order as though the Resistance was a conventional military that could match the FO in open battle. But it isn't. Between roughly equivalent forces, trading a couple of squadrons for a dreadnought would be a net gain, and probably would have been considered justified. But when those are the only squadrons you have, and the enemy has a bunch more dreadnoughts, it is proportionally a net loss.
I'm reminded of a line in Return of the King (book version) where someone (Faramir I think) says that they can make Mordor pay with ten men for every one of there's to cross the river, and they'll still come out behind, because Mordor can more easily afford to lose an army than they can afford to lose a company. Same situation here.
What Poe doesn't know is the NR remnants are utterly incapable of forming any resistance.
True, though that is notably not a reason Poe gives for his actions.Eternal_Freedom wrote: ↑2019-03-25 06:41pm The bomber attack did accomplish one thing beyond just blowing up the dreadnoguht - from what little we saw, Captain Genardy (IIRC) was a lot more competent than Hux was. Getting rid of a competent senior officer (something the FO sorely lacks) mayindeed be worth it.
IIRC, there's a line somewhere that the FO is expected to finish overrunning the galaxy in a matter of weeks. Also, of course, the lack of any response to Leia's message at the end of the film.Elheru Aran wrote: ↑2019-03-25 06:43pmA quick point: how are you saying "the NR remnants are utterly incapable" etc.? Is this discussed in the novelization or other current post-TFA EU?ray245 wrote: ↑2019-03-25 06:37pm If Poe is making the assumption that they can get reinforcements from the NR fleet remnants, then it is a decent strategic victory as well. The remnants of the NR need to avoid a fleet-killer at all cost.
What Poe doesn't know is the NR remnants are utterly incapable of forming any resistance.
The impression one gets of the NR is that people are just so sick of war that they're prepared to accept peace at any price, for the most part, rather than fight back against a strong opponent.