Invader ZIm wrote:Patrick Degan wrote:[Why should the Imperials care if Federationists devestate a Federation world under Imperial occupation? Furthermore, an ISD can devestate a Federation world without even having to employ the requisite firepower for a full BDZ op. A five minute bombardment with the heavy turbolasers would unleash sufficent energy to totally depopulate the target world, and the Imperials would do that upon receipt of a Federationist terror threat simply to make a point.
Is this a presupposition that there isnt anything of higher value to the Empire than a single ISD?
Such as...? Raw materials can be gotten from any planet and large asteroids. Federation technology is a meagre joke compared to the Empire's, so there's nothing of value in that direction. None of the Empire's own worlds are threatened, and the only real bargaining chip at play here is labour power. The mere fact that the ex-Federation's rogue military remnant would be willing to slaughter its own people hands a
huge reason for the former citizens of the Federation to swear fealty to the Empire, and the mere threat of a far more certain and swifter retaliation is more likely to cause disaffection in the ranks of the rogue Starfleet —whose personnel may not desire the destruction of their own homeworlds as the possible price for a political abstraction.
The value equation doesn't even enter into the picture in the first place. No Imperial commander in his right mind would hand over a ship of the line to what essentially at this point are terrorists; not only for the obvious military reasons but also because one such ascession would simply invite more terror blackmail. The terror threat is a non-starter.
Patrick Degan wrote:And exactly what do the fugitive remnants of a vanquished nation have to offer to an officer of the victorious conquering power to induce a defection?
I dont nessesarillay think that they will. But its a more productive approach that expending 1000 of the last Federation starships in a useless raid to capture a single ISD.
The rogue Starfleet remnant have nothing of value to offer any Imperial officer to encourage disaffection, so this too is a non-starter.
Patrick Degan wrote:Why should a highly disciplined, professional military force in a high state of morale and training entertain the idea of a mutiny? How do agitators get on board, infiltrate the crew, and avoid ship's security in the process to carry out this project?
Again they might well not. But wouldn't this be more efficent than wasting the few resources you have under your command in a hopeless operation?
And again, the rogue Starfleet remnant have nothing of material or political value to offer to Imperial personnel to encourage disaffection, so this also is a non-starter.
Patrick Degan wrote:And how is this contaminant smuggled on board? And how does it violate the laws of physics or biology to achieve swift shipwide contamination? How does it defeat the ship's own compartmentalisation procedures which can act far faster than any biological, chemical, or radiological agent can possibly spread through such a large internal volume as contained in a stardestroyer? How does this affect Imperial squaddies wearing NBC-sealed body armour, nevermind wardroids?
If you are looking for a "bulletproof" method by which the Federation could capture a single ISD then look elsewhere. I outlined 4 options which in my opinion had a much higher success rate than throwing fleet assets into the fire.
The problem is that none of these options are viable. A threat to destroy a Federation planet carries no weight as a blackmail tactic against the Empire, and has a huge blowback potential both politically and militarily. Neither does any attempted inducement at disaffection; there is no realistic motivation to join with a defeated nation's rogue military remnant. And option four requires clever trickery and sheer, dumb luck on such a huge scale that any such plan is far more likely to fall from its own weight before the target ISD could even be approached.
The plain fact is that if the Federationists had the firepower to be able to board and capture an ISD in the first place, the Federation would not have lost the war. And clever trickery or attempted terrorist blackmail is a
very poor substitute for lack of firepower.
Beyond this, it really is to wonder that anybody imagines that either scheme is remotely feasible, and that Federationists would be willing to "fight to the last man" after their nation has been crushed by a vastly superior power instead of simply accepting reality. While the Zakdorns (and some Trek-cultists) may be stupid enough to believe that the word "mismatch" is synonomous with "challenge" instead of "victimisation", logic and history both demonstrate in brutal, concrete terms that the Superior Force will
always conquer the inferior. Without fail. And the greater the power-disparity between the two, the more effortless the conquest.