The next Romulan - Klingon war

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Post by MrAnderson »

Death from the Sea wrote:
More Romulan scientists does not mean more brain power, or the ability to miraculously comprehend something that has eluded them thus far. While two minds are better than one and four better than two; the Romulans using more scientists does not make each Romulan smarter.

Actually I believe the opposite is true. Larger groups as a rule move slower and are less innovative than smaller groups. Too many cooks and that sort of thing.
That is the sound of inevitability.
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MrAnderson wrote:Actually I believe the opposite is true. Larger groups as a rule move slower and are less innovative than smaller groups. Too many cooks and that sort of thing.
And yet, reserch groups with more staff and funding are generally more productive, and want more funding and more staff. When was the last time you saw chancer reseach standing on the corner saying "SLASH OUR FUNDS, FIRE OUR RESEARCHES, WE'LL DO BETTER THAT WAY!" :?:
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Post by Death from the Sea »

NecronLord wrote:They had the concept and trilithium before him remember...
How do you know they had the concept before Soran? He has been plotting to get back to the Nexus since Kirk's death. If the Romulans have been trying to make trilithium a weapon for that long and have been unable to stabilize it much less figure out how to make it into a weapon, how are they going to do it now? Magic?
Hah. I think you'll find that a project with 2362 scientists working on it will have more brain power than one with 2. They don't need to make each romulan smarter, it's called spreading the workload.
Spreading the workload is not going to magically make your comprehension of something happen.
And if you wanted to wipe out say... Romulus?
I don't recall him wanting to wipe out Romulus, if he did want to then why not do it before you chase off after the Ent-E? What kind of sense does it make to overthrow the Govt. and sieze the planet just to destroy it. If anything he would relocate the Romulans to Remus mines to make them suffer.
The Tal-Shiar was effectively wiped out in the DS9 episode "The Die is Cast" along with the Obsidian Order.
And?
Well you were the one who said the Tal-Shiar had the tech, how can they have the tech when they no longer exist?
Because he want's to make the Remans look good.
Right, because the Romulans seeking his help and giving him a ship that you say he couldn't have made would be sooooo degrading. Come on he was trying to prove how much of a great leader he was and you do forget he had allies in the Romulan govt and Romulan navy to help keep it secret from the others.
Because he's the Praetor, and also the one who will lead you to victory over your enemies?
You didn't notice how the Romulans he was ordering around didn't like it too much, they wanted a govt. change but not neccessarily him in the Praetor's chair.
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Post by CDiehl »

NecronLord is right. The Romulans very likely attacked from another direction during the war (never saw it, only heard of it secondhand). However, nothing was said or shown that I remember to indicate they did much more in that direction. They might have taken a poke at Cardassia, sent a token fleet to join the allied fleet, and held back the bulk of their forces. I don't picture the Romulans caring a great deal if the Klingons or the Federation win or lose against the Dominion, as long as they los a bunch of ships in the process. Also, of all the times the Romulans have ever been shown on Star Trek, they are rarely shown sending more than a few ships or people into a situation. I think an argument can be made from what is shown, that they may not have a large fleet to begin with, and have to rely on intimidation to prevail in most situations. Also, an argument can be made that they have a lot of ships, and don't use them unless they have to, and did not consider saving the Federation's and the Klingons' bacon a worthy cause. I don't know which argument is right, but from what I've seen, I consider them to be reasonable.

As for the idea of using the Scimitar to waste Qo'NoS, hey, if they still have a ship like that available (preferrably if they have several), go for it. Having not seen Nemesis, I am going to assume the Scimitar was a prototype that took a long time to make, and got destroyed by the Enterprise. Even if the Enterprise was also destroyed in the process, I would not count on the Klingons not kamikaze-ing a new Scimitar to save Qo'NoS. Of course, I also would not build an invasion plan around deploying a superweapon, and especially not one I don't have in stock. My ideas of how each side would attack the other were based on both sides having only conventional forces available to them.
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Post by seanrobertson »

With apologies to Necron, this is the first post in which I can do more than say "I agree, though I have minor reservations for one nitpick reason." As such I would like to tackle it first :)
CDiehl wrote:NecronLord is right. The Romulans very likely attacked from another direction during the war (never saw it, only heard of it secondhand).
In the Dominion War? No. Definitely not. I've got the DS9 transcripts. I don't remember anything about them fighting a war on multiple fronts.
However, nothing was said or shown that I remember to indicate they did much more in that direction. They might have taken a poke at Cardassia, sent a token fleet to join the allied fleet, and held back the bulk of their forces.
I don't think they held back the bulk of their assets. They struck the Cardassians very hard from the get-go, as we're told near the end of "In the Pale Moonlight." They were the ones that liberated a Dominion-occupied Betazed. And Odo tells us that they were "in no shape to wage war on anyone." If he's right--and we have no reason to believe otherwise--the Romulans must have committed significant forces to battling the Dominion. (If you're in no shape to fight, that means you've taken serious losses, the majority of which would've been on the front lines.)
I don't picture the Romulans caring a great deal if the Klingons or the Federation win or lose against the Dominion, as long as they los a bunch of ships in the process.
But if they broke their treaty with the Dominion, and the Jem'Hadar were ultimately victorious against the UFP-KE Alliance, the Romulans would be up shit creek sans paddle. Alone, they didn't have the strength to fight the Dominion for very long, especially when one adds in the relatively fresh Breen fleet.

No...after they committed to back the UFP-KE, they either had to push hard for victory or get ready to be steamrolled.
Also, of all the times the Romulans have ever been shown on Star Trek, they are rarely shown sending more than a few ships or people into a situation. I think an argument can be made from what is shown, that they may not have a large fleet to begin with, and have to rely on intimidation to prevail in most situations. Also, an argument can be made that they have a lot of ships, and don't use them unless they have to, and did not consider saving the Federation's and the Klingons' bacon a worthy cause. I don't know which argument is right, but from what I've seen, I consider them to be reasonable.
That's fair.

I don't think the "lots of ships" argument floats for a number of reasons, though in a certain context it can look good.

1--We never see these ships. Observed capabilities are everything in analysis.

2--We're told the Romulans weren't capable of much more fighting after the War ended, in spite of the fact that they entered the conflict a good year after the Federation and Klingons did. If they had tons of ships in reserve that shouldn't be a problem.

3--After the Romulans joined the fight, significantly holding back would be moronic: A. Their allies would know this was the case, and when it came time to divide up the spoils of war, the Romulans could be justifiably shafted; B. The Dominion was pushing the Alliance very hard in the first place. If the Romulans held back and let the UFP-KE get whacked, they would soon be standing alone against an enemy which can build ships and breed soldiers at a dizzying rate--an enemy which still has Breen [and potentially, Cardassian] allies. Even if the Dominion "Axis" was depleted in defeating the UFP-KE, 3 to 1 odds still means the Romulans lose horrificially, especially when the Dominion Proper is itself more than a match for any single Alpha/Beta Quadrant power.

4--If the Romulans did have a humongous fleet of deadly Warbirds--ships which, I would readily admit, are far more powerful than any widely fielded Klingon or Starfleet designs--just what held the Romulans in check for so long?

With that kind of strength, they could easily have taken on the Federation OR Klingons individually before the latter two signed their mutual defense pact (which evidently post-dates the Federation-Cardassian War, given the lack of Klingon involvement).

We also know there are plenty of hard-liners in the Romulan government who would've liked nothing better than to topple the neighboring powers. But they held back. Many of their highest-ranking officials even defected to avoid the destruction such a war would wreak on the RSE (Admiral Jarok, the people transported in "Face of the Enemy").

It's important to qualify that I don't believe the Romulans have a comparatively TINY fleet or some such thing; rather, they simply don't have near as many ships as the Klingons or Starfleet do. This is largely due to their odd proclivities for building giant, resource-intensive vessels.
As for the idea of using the Scimitar to waste Qo'NoS, hey, if they still have a ship like that available (preferrably if they have several), go for it. Having not seen Nemesis, I am going to assume the Scimitar was a prototype that took a long time to make, and got destroyed by the Enterprise.
That's on the right track :)
Even if the Enterprise was also destroyed in the process, I would not count on the Klingons not kamikaze-ing a new Scimitar to save Qo'NoS. Of course, I also would not build an invasion plan around deploying a superweapon, and especially not one I don't have in stock. My ideas of how each side would attack the other were based on both sides having only conventional forces available to them.
The thing about the Scimitar is that it's probably what we call "lost tech." As previously noted, the thing seemed to incorporate a very large percentage of stolen Jem'Hadar technology in its design. As you note, it was also built around a superweapon that's not only dangerous, but the Romulans now know is really not worth the expense (seeing as how three ships managed to defeat Scimitar and all).

It's only really any good against an overly centralized government like the Federation. I'm not convinced it'd do near as much good against the Klingon Empire which, also as previously noted, has redundant military C&C. An invasion predicated on the "beheading" of the Empire would not go smoothly enough for the Romulans to even consider, IMO, which is part of the reason why Shinzon probably decided to attack Earth and the Federation.
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Post by Gandalf »

seanrobertson wrote:In the Dominion War? No. Definitely not. I've got the DS9 transcripts. I don't remember anything about them fighting a war on multiple fronts.
Wouldn't multiple fronts be implied by the fact that at the end if In The Pale Moonlight there is a reference to stations being destroyed along the Romulan border? Since the treaty only allowed for them to pass through Romulan space, the stations must be somehwere where Dominion space borders with that of the Romulans.
However, nothing was said or shown that I remember to indicate they did much more in that direction. They might have taken a poke at Cardassia, sent a token fleet to join the allied fleet, and held back the bulk of their forces.
Whilst I'm not sure to what you're referring, before they officially declared war there was a NAP in place.
I don't think they held back the bulk of their assets. They struck the Cardassians very hard from the get-go, as we're told near the end of "In the Pale Moonlight." They were the ones that liberated a Dominion-occupied Betazed. And Odo tells us that they were "in no shape to wage war on anyone." If he's right--and we have no reason to believe otherwise--the Romulans must have committed significant forces to battling the Dominion. (If you're in no shape to fight, that means you've taken serious losses, the majority of which would've been on the front lines.)
Whilst they may have committed serious forces to the war effort, it has been shown that not all ships and personell got as beaten up and killed as the Klingons and Federation, as the opening scene in "Inter Arma..." shows.

3--After the Romulans joined the fight, significantly holding back would be moronic: A. Their allies would know this was the case, and when it came time to divide up the spoils of war, the Romulans could be justifiably shafted; B. The Dominion was pushing the Alliance very hard in the first place. If the Romulans held back and let the UFP-KE get whacked, they would soon be standing alone against an enemy which can build ships and breed soldiers at a dizzying rate--an enemy which still has Breen [and potentially, Cardassian] allies. Even if the Dominion "Axis" was depleted in defeating the UFP-KE, 3 to 1 odds still means the Romulans lose horrificially, especially when the Dominion Proper is itself more than a match for any single Alpha/Beta Quadrant power.
Perhaps they were holding back so that the Federation and Klingons would get beaten up, yet still win so the Romulans could be the most powerful in the AQ.

4--If the Romulans did have a humongous fleet of deadly Warbirds--ships which, I would readily admit, are far more powerful than any widely fielded Klingon or Starfleet designs--just what held the Romulans in check for so long?[/quote]

The Federation Klingon Alliance kept them in hold. And various TM's and such put a D'deridex class Warbird up there with a GCS.
With that kind of strength, they could easily have taken on the Federation OR Klingons individually before the latter two signed their mutual defense pact (which evidently post-dates the Federation-Cardassian War, given the lack of Klingon involvement).


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Post by seanrobertson »

Ahoy Gandalf :)
Gandalf wrote: Wouldn't multiple fronts be implied by the fact that at the end if In The Pale Moonlight there is a reference to stations being destroyed along the Romulan border? Since the treaty only allowed for them to pass through Romulan space, the stations must be somehwere where Dominion space borders with that of the Romulans.
Yes. They apparently do share a border. But I don't know that the stations destroyed were necessarily along the Romulan border:

SISKO
This morning, at oh-eight-hundred
hours, station time... the Romulan
Empire formally declared war
against the Dominion. They've
already struck fifteen bases along
the Cardassian border.

Perhaps it was along their shared border, but I always got the impression that Romulan territory was too far away from the Dominion for the former to be as viable a target as UFP-KE assets. Senator Cretak mentions that many of the Romulans' wounded were "dying on the long trip back to Romulus," hence the need for a "hospital" on the Bajoran moon Durna. Wouldn't you know it, that's one of the few episodes for which I DON'T have a transcript...
Whilst I'm not sure to what you're referring, before they officially declared
war there was a NAP in place.
That's right.
Whilst they may have committed serious forces to the war effort, it has been shown that not all ships and personell got as beaten up and killed as the Klingons and Federation, as the opening scene in "Inter Arma..." shows.
I don't remember the opening scene. The script indicates that it was an exchange between Bashir and Garak, but then again, the script says squat about those ~dozen Warbirds in orbit of Romulus upon the Bellerophon's arrival.

But I agree that their ships don't seem to get quite as beat up as their allies' do. At one point in "Inter," Cretak complains that two Warbirds' repairs had been delayed for three weeks while Federation and Klingon ships were being patched up. I imagine that O'Brien and his team put them on the back burner because they didn't need much work.
Perhaps they were holding back so that the Federation and Klingons would get beaten up, yet still win so the Romulans could be the most powerful in the AQ.
Yes, a definite possibility. Still, it seems a bit...risky, to say the least, since they didn't really know victory was assured. The combined three were barely winning when the Breen entered the fray, which then left the Klingons shouldering the burden alone for a time. If there was ever a time for the Romulans to step things up, that would've been it.

Then again, that was toward the end of the war, so it might not be so important. I just think the Romulans would know well enough to go ahead and strike while the iron was hot, lest they slowly deplete their forces while the Jem'Hadar just keep coming and coming. In those circumstances, it's best to hit with as much force as possible.

The fact that Odo thought they weren't in any shape to keep waging war ("What You Leave Behind") seems to substantiate this. But I have to agree that it's more in keeping with Romulan ethos to let the Federation and Klingons shoulder most of the effort. They couldn't allow the Allies to perceive that, lest they get screwed when it came time to divide things up, but then, the Romulans were always pretty good at keeping things under wraps...
The Federation Klingon Alliance kept them in hold. And various TM's and such put a D'deridex class Warbird up there with a GCS.
I know the mutual defense pact kept them back, but you'd think that if their fleet, presumably made up almost entirely of said mighty Warbirds, was anywhere near as large as the Klingons', for instance, even the combined might of the Federation and Klingons might not be much of a threat. (That treats certain things, like the likelihood of a multi-front war, lightly, though.)

Incidentally, I've seen some neat comparisons of Warbirds and GCSs over the years. I always regarded the Warbird as a markedly superior warship, with alpha-strike capability and very hefty firepower.

Many are quick to point out that GCSs have better overall weapon coverage, but their most powerful weapons are also in the fwd. arc. Besideswhich, most GCSs seem to just park and shoot when fighting roughly-matched ships (the volatile ship in "Reunification," the Tamarian cruiser). Hell, scratch that: GCSs park and shoot even against vastly superior opponents, like the Husnock warship, Borg cubes, or that Borg transwarp "minelayer" ship from "Descent."

I therefore imagine that GCSs would just slug it out face-to-face with Warbirds, too, for the most part anyway. I see that as a losing proposition, even if GCSs have superior shields. (That's an unknown. In "Message In a Bottle" we saw Prometheus tear through a Nebula and a Warbird with roughly equivalent ease, but that's far too difficult to determine anything from. The Warbird in that case might've taken previous fire from the two Defiants or Akira.)
In Way of The Warrior, Garak describes a "skirmish" that lasts 17 years.
Yes. The "Betreka Nebula Incident." Garak says it was over "ages ago," and that relations between the Klingons and Cardassians had been "amicable," hence his surprise that the Klingons would attack him:

GARAK
...What I can't understand is their
inexplicable hostility toward me.
Maligning Constable Odo is one
thing... after all he is a
changeling and the Klingons don't
know him as well as we do. But
relations between the Klingon and
Cardassian Empires have never been
anything but amicable.

BASHIR
With the exception of the Betreka
Nebula incident.

GARAK
(dismissive)
A minor skirmish.

BASHIR
That lasted eighteen years!

GARAK
That was ages ago.
(a beat, still puzzled)
Maybe they decided they just
didn't like me?

But who knows. Garak's idea of "ages ago" and "never been anything but amicable" might be altogether different than what we would regard as a long time ago or friendly. I doubt he's simply wrong, but his words are ambiguous...not unusual for the good tailor :)
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Post by Ender »

Death from the Sea wrote:
Hah. I think you'll find that a project with 2362 scientists working on it will have more brain power than one with 2. They don't need to make each romulan smarter, it's called spreading the workload.
Spreading the workload is not going to magically make your comprehension of something happen.
Unfortunatly, reality runs contrary to your opinions. Larger, well funded research teams make discoveries faster. Accept it.
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Post by Sarevok »

I think the best explanation for the lack of Romulan ships seen onscreen in DS9 was that they remained cloaked. The Romulans after all love to use stealthy techniques. They may not have decided to uncloak any more ships than absolutely necessary to win, thereby ensuring that they suffer the least losses among the allies.
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Post by Darth Wong »

The Romulans are weak. Consider the evidence:
  1. They immediately capitulated to the Dominion even though they had every reason to suspect that the Dominion would eventually turn on them (you don't try to wipe out someone's homeworld and expect no hard feelings).
  2. They only entered the war when they felt they had no choice, and that Dominion attack was imminent.
  3. They bragged about destroying Dominion forces piecemeal as they tried to breach Romulan territory, but they were surprisingly reluctant to go offensive. The defender normally has a tactical advantage which may allow him to compensate for inferior numbers, particularly in this case where he can use cloaking devices.
  4. In Nemesis, the Romulan Empire's military chiefs of staff decided to stop Shinzon and were unable to provide more than two warships to do the job.
  5. Also from Nemesis, the Romulan Empire was conquered by Shinzon, whose forces appeared to consist solely of a single battleship. As powerful as the Scimitar was, it is certainly no match for giant fleets of thousands of warships. Their homefront forces must be surprisingly weak, which does not bode well for the rest of their forces.
  6. The Romulans have cloaking devices which could easily be used to make it appear as if they have more ships than they really do (you can never get a solid ship count, and one ship which decloaks ten times at strategic intervals might be mistaken for ten ships).
  7. In "All Good Things", we heard that the Klingons annexed the Romulans. Granted, that was an alternate future, but it must not be ridiculously implausible or it would be hard to imagine how an alternate timeline would produce such an outcome.
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Post by Gandalf »

evilcat4000 wrote:I think the best explanation for the lack of Romulan ships seen onscreen in DS9 was that they remained cloaked. The Romulans after all love to use stealthy techniques. They may not have decided to uncloak any more ships than absolutely necessary to win, thereby ensuring that they suffer the least losses among the allies.
Not to sound rude but I highly doubt that, as the Dominion can sense cloaks, and decloaking in a battle isnt a good idea
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Post by NecronLord »

Darth Wong wrote:
  1. They immediately capitulated to the Dominion even though they had every reason to suspect that the Dominion would eventually turn on them (you don't try to wipe out someone's homeworld and expect no hard feelings).
And? America stayed out of WW2 until attacked, didn't make them weak

[*]They only entered the war when they felt they had no choice, and that Dominion attack was imminent.
See example above

[*]They bragged about destroying Dominion forces piecemeal as they tried to breach Romulan territory, but they were surprisingly reluctant to go offensive. The defender normally has a tactical advantage which may allow him to compensate for inferior numbers, particularly in this case where he can use cloaking devices.
When was this? In the first day of the war they went on the offensive.

[*]In Nemesis, the Romulan Empire's military chiefs of staff decided to stop Shinzon and were unable to provide more than two warships to do the job.
Romulan warbirds are slower than galaxies, the ent-e is faster, prehaps those were the only ships fast enough to catch them? Chances are the Valdore fits the role of fast interceptor, possibly designed for running down spies and enemy scouts. A very fast picket as the culture would call it.

[*]Also from Nemesis, the Romulan Empire was conquered by Shinzon, whose forces appeared to consist solely of a single battleship. As powerful as the Scimitar was, it is certainly no match for giant fleets of thousands of warships. Their homefront forces must be surprisingly weak, which does not bode well for the rest of their forces.
He had the support of the navy remember.

[*]The Romulans have cloaking devices which could easily be used to make it appear as if they have more ships than they really do (you can never get a solid ship count, and one ship which decloaks ten times at strategic intervals might be mistaken for ten ships).
And? This doesn't prove much. The same could be said of the Klingons.

[*]In "All Good Things", we heard that the Klingons annexed the Romulans. Granted, that was an alternate future, but it must not be ridiculously implausible or it would be hard to imagine how an alternate timeline would produce such an outcome.[/list]
Picard was able to defeat the best swordsman in northern england in another Q simulation. He would be slaughtered in reality.

Also, the klingons in that reality had made some hefty tech advances which they have yet to develop in the series continuity. And of course, the dominion war never happened in that reality, which would skew things.
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Post by CaptainChewbacca »

If there was a war, the Klingons would make for a blitzkrieg. Drive hard and fast for Romulas, and decimate it from orbit. If they get there fast enough, the Romulans won't be able to get their ships home in time.

Their government is so centralized that after the fall of the capitol, local governors will be commandeering ships to protect their assets, so that instead of one coordinated empire the Klingons would face fifty tiny ones.

A sure victory. Even if the Fed didn't actively participate, you can bet that they or the Ferengi would be selling them supplies. The Fed would get involved just to moderate the Klingons assault.

If the Klingons get time to build up to their pre-war peak, I give the Romulans only four years before they are broken.
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Post by Sarevok »

Gandalf wrote:
evilcat4000 wrote:I think the best explanation for the lack of Romulan ships seen onscreen in DS9 was that they remained cloaked. The Romulans after all love to use stealthy techniques. They may not have decided to uncloak any more ships than absolutely necessary to win, thereby ensuring that they suffer the least losses among the allies.
Not to sound rude but I highly doubt that, as the Dominion can sense cloaks, and decloaking in a battle isnt a good idea
You have a good point there, I may be wrong. Ships lack shields when cloaked and when decloaking a few seconds are need for the shields to come back online leaving it volunerable for a short period. So decloaking in the midst of a battle may be a bad idea. That might explain why the Romulan Warbirds travelled with the allied fleet uncloaked.
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CaptainChewbacca wrote:If there was a war, the Klingons would make for a blitzkrieg, and proceed to fuck me up the ass with bat'leths and
pain sticks.
...:wtf:
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Post by seanrobertson »

NecronLord wrote: And? America stayed out of WW2 until attacked, didn't make them weak
That's certainly true, but the U.S. stayed out of the war for different reasons. Roosevelt didn't immediately capitulate to the Axis to avoid war, but the Romulans bent over backwards to avoid fighting the Dominion. They were even willing to overlook violation of their borders so long as they didn't get wailed on.
When was this? In the first day of the war they went on the offensive.
Yes.

I think Mike was just a little confused about the sequence of events, something rather understandable when dealing with DS9 :)

He was probably thinking of how the Jem'Hadar would move through Romulan territory to strike at Federation assets which, as noted above, the Romulans were quick to overlook.
Romulan warbirds are slower than galaxies, the ent-e is faster, prehaps those were the only ships fast enough to catch them? Chances are the Valdore fits the role of fast interceptor, possibly designed for running down spies and enemy scouts. A very fast picket as the culture would call it.
That has potential. I would propose, however, that even with slower ships, a huge Romulan fleet should've been able to send more than two warships before the Scimitar was finally blown up.

The E-E and Scimitar WERE, after all, still in Romulan territory or at the Neutral Zone, where the "bulk of the Romulan fleet is deployed" (paraphrase, "In the Pale Moonlight").

The Neutral Zone may well be huge, hundreds of ly long perhaps. Consequently, the density of ships in any given area might not be THAT significant, but two ships is still a bit...light :)

He had the support of the navy remember.
Good point.

OTOH, did he have the fleet's support before he toppled the Senate? We know he had a handful of backers, any one of which might've had control of perhaps a single warship; e.g., Donatra.

I got the impression that the fleet only backed him after he was Praetor.
The same could be said of the Klingons.
Yes. The Klingons are even known to cloak-recloak ships to make precise counts difficult ("WoTW").

Then again, we've seen lots of Klingon ships onscreen at one time. And I don't think anyone suggested that the Klingons might have many more ships under cloak, simply hidden from our view. That appears to be what Mike was responding to.
Picard was able to defeat the best swordsman in northern england in another Q simulation. He would be slaughtered in reality.

Also, the klingons in that reality had made some hefty tech advances which they have yet to develop in the series continuity. And of course, the dominion war never happened in that reality, which would skew things.
Do we know the Dominion War didn't happen?

The main difference I see between "QPid" (AGH, the horror, the horror...) and "All Good Things" is that Picard, Troi, etc. instantly recognizedthat they were in some faked-up scenario. "AGT" was very much real to Picard, so he believed the Klingons could actually conquer the RSE.

The circumstances surrounding that conquest are unknown, but I submit that it could be very cut and dry...we know, after all, that the Klingons were able to whip the Federation in yet another alternate timeline, and the Federation IS stronger than the Romulans overall (ref: Odo's line about "the Federation wouldn't allow [the Romulans or Klingons to invade the Gamma Quadrant]").

Insofar as technical advancements, the only remarkable thing I remember the "AGT" Klingons pulling was that firing-as-they-decloaked trick. I don't know how noteworthy that might truly be...they did, after all, have to decloak to keep firing.
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Post by NecronLord »

seanrobertson wrote:That's certainly true, but the U.S. stayed out of the war for different reasons. Roosevelt didn't immediately capitulate to the Axis to avoid war, but the Romulans bent over backwards to avoid fighting the Dominion. They were even willing to overlook violation of their borders so long as they didn't get wailed on.
Ah yes, but they were letting them violate their territory to attack the feds. What a shame that would be...

He was probably thinking of how the Jem'Hadar would move through Romulan territory to strike at Federation assets which, as noted above, the Romulans were quick to overlook.
Well, why make a fuss when it suits your own machiavellian purposes?

That has potential. I would propose, however, that even with slower ships, a huge Romulan fleet should've been able to send more than two warships before the Scimitar was finally blown up.

The E-E and Scimitar WERE, after all, still in Romulan territory or at the Neutral Zone, where the "bulk of the Romulan fleet is deployed" (paraphrase, "In the Pale Moonlight").

The Neutral Zone may well be huge, hundreds of ly long perhaps. Consequently, the density of ships in any given area might not be THAT significant, but two ships is still a bit...light :)
True enough. But then again, we know subspace signals take time to propogate, the rest of the fleet may have been planning to assemble near the fed fleet or ambush the Schem on the way.

Good point.

OTOH, did he have the fleet's support before he toppled the Senate? We know he had a handful of backers, any one of which might've had control of perhaps a single warship; e.g., Donatra.

I got the impression that the fleet only backed him after he was Praetor.
I'm fairly certain that those admirals in the beginning were on his side. They walk up and say that they should be nice to the Reamans. The senate laugh and then get garden gnomed. IMO that was a set up sequence of events.

Then again, we've seen lots of Klingon ships onscreen at one time. And I don't think anyone suggested that the Klingons might have many more ships under cloak, simply hidden from our view. That appears to be what Mike was responding to.
Well, not my concern then.

Do we know the Dominion War didn't happen?
There was no mention of it. In any case the tech implemented on the future ent was not even similar to that developed during the war. No armour for one.

The main difference I see between "QPid" (AGH, the horror, the horror...) and "All Good Things" is that Picard, Troi, etc. instantly recognizedthat they were in some faked-up scenario. "AGT" was very much real to Picard, so he believed the Klingons could actually conquer the RSE.
Well it's not outright impossible, if it were, they (the RSE) would have stomped them long ago. There is IMO usually a rough parity.

In any case, I don't see the relavance of a future reality substantially different from the one that actually happened. IMO Sloan is a more reliable source on post war power in the AQ than a Q simulation.

(Besides, if Q wanted them to think Qpid was completely real, then he would likely be able to do it. See Farpoint.)
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Post by seanrobertson »

NecronLord wrote:
I'm fairly certain that those admirals in the beginning were on his side. They walk up and say that they should be nice to the Reamans. The senate laugh and then get garden gnomed. IMO that was a set up sequence of events.
Get garden gnomed...I LOVE it! :)

No offense to Darth GG, of course :)
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I should mention that the idea that of the Romulans having a large number of ships held in reserve is not likely, but I suggested it because it's a possibility and I didn't want to ignore it. I think it is more likely they have a small fleet for the size of their territory.

Now, even if they had a large fleet, I don't think the Romulans would want to spend a lot of it saving the Federation or the Klingons so they will continue to have sufficient forces to contain them. The alliance with the Federation and Klingons was solely to fight the Dominion. If the allies won, the Romulans go back to their conflict with the Federation and Klingons. If the Dominion won, there's not much to be allied with. Either way, the Romulans are on their own. I think the Romulans were counting on the other combatants in the war wearing each other out, and if they protected their forces and let the allies do most of the fighting, they could become the dominant power in a depleted Alpha Quadrant. I also think the Breen's involvement surprised everyone, including the Romulans.

How would the Romulans deal with the Dominion? I think that's what the base on Durna was for. The "hospital" there quickly began to look like a pretext to build a base in Bajoran territory. The only thing of interest related to the Dominion in Bajoran territory is the wormhole. It's possible they were trying to establish a presence near the wormhole, and hoped to push the Federation out. The Romulans might assume they could hold off Dominion reinforcements coming from the Delta Quadrant and finish off what they have left in the Alpha Quadrant.

Getting back to the main point, I think the treaty signed at the end of the Dominion War would give the victorious allies a lot of former Cardassian territory, since almost everyone in the known galaxy just took turns beating the Cardassians for the last few years. The Federation might have recovered the systems they gave up after the Cardassian War, so the Klingons and Romulans will take the rest of what's up for grabs. This provides a good backdrop for a Klingon-Romulan war, as both sides try to expand at Cardassia's expense. The Breen could also hop in, hoping to get for themselves what the Founders promised them right before the war ended.
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CDiehl wrote:Getting back to the main point, I think the treaty signed at the end of the Dominion War would give the victorious allies a lot of former Cardassian territory, since almost everyone in the known galaxy just took turns beating the Cardassians for the last few years. The Federation might have recovered the systems they gave up after the Cardassian War, so the Klingons and Romulans will take the rest of what's up for grabs. This provides a good backdrop for a Klingon-Romulan war, as both sides try to expand at Cardassia's expense. The Breen could also hop in, hoping to get for themselves what the Founders promised them right before the war ended.
I don't think that the Breen are in a position to do much of anything since they were on the loosing side of the Dominon war. Then there is the whole they have to ask permission of the Founders since they are part of the Dominon now, and I don't think the founders would allow that.
That would be like Italy trying to annex part of other countries after WWII, the others wouldn't allow it.
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Death from the Sea wrote:
The Tal-Shiar was effectively wiped out in the DS9 episode "The Die is Cast" along with the Obsidian Order.
And?
Well you were the one who said the Tal-Shiar had the tech, how can they have the tech when they no longer exist?
Oh, as this thread isn't quite dead yet, and I only just noticed this. The Tal-Shiar are very much alive and well as of Inter Arma... Two seasons after TDiC.
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NecronLord wrote:
Death from the Sea wrote:
The Tal-Shiar was effectively wiped out in the DS9 episode "The Die is Cast" along with the Obsidian Order.
Well you were the one who said the Tal-Shiar had the tech, how can they have the tech when they no longer exist?
Oh, as this thread isn't quite dead yet, and I only just noticed this. The Tal-Shiar are very much alive and well as of Inter Arma... Two seasons after TDiC.
Ok so the Tal-Shiar survived TDiC. I still say that it is not a guarantee that the Romulans will figure out the trilithium tech. If anyone would it would be starfleet because they had the detailed scans from Data and LaForge tricorders plus the scans the Ent-D would have made herself of the missle being fired.
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Yeah, just like the time they scanned an iconian portal with their tricorders and built their own.... Or the time they scanned a strange alien life form and knew everything about it. :roll: Tricorders aren't that advanced.

As for being able to scan it as it moved, why haven't they produced any of those romulan plasma torpedoes yet? They scanned that.

Sensors don't tell you everything..
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NecronLord wrote:Yeah, just like the time they scanned an iconian portal with their tricorders and built their own.... Or the time they scanned a strange alien life form and knew everything about it. :roll: Tricorders aren't that advanced.
Those are somewhat different in that they are beyond Starfleets current tech levels. Trilithium torpedoes might be above the current tech level for Starfleet, but then it would be above the tch level for the Romulans too.
As for being able to scan it as it moved, why haven't they produced any of those romulan plasma torpedoes yet? They scanned that.
Sensors don't tell you everything..
Why make the plasma torpedoes? Kirk figured out how to counter them. Why don't Romulans employ them on their current ships? They are only good against things that can't run.
Your right sensors don't tell you everything, but I would say they have a better place to start researching than the Romulans do.
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Post by NecronLord »

Assuminy of course, that there was not a warbird or scout ship still in the Amagosa system, even then, the Duras Sisters still needed the data from Soran despite having a prolonged opportunity to observe the star.

(and no, learning everthing about an alien is not beyond their tech levels, according to the TMP novel they can scan a human down to a molecular level on a bio bed...)
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