VT-16 wrote:Having never read the NJO books and only glanced at the SW Tales YV War story with Kyle Katarn (when even Katarn's involvement can't move me, you know the franchise took a wrong turn), I have to ask, how big and devastating was this war anyway?
The way it's depicted in Wookieepedia, it beat out the GCW which was on-going throughout the Galaxy for 20+ years and the CW which covered just about every civilized world throughout its 3-year span. The force-composition of the YV society just doesn't add up to a great conflict that would go on for so long and have so great consequences. Even the Legacy comics talk about it like some big thing, even more than the CW (not mentioned at all, IIRC) or the GCW.
The equipment used and the weaponry involved does not compute with mass-devastation and big defeats. Did the YV just tear ass in one direction through to Coruscant and then just wing it?
As mentioned, it seems more that the popular perception is aided more by the vast destruction the Yuzhan Vong purposely sown throughout the galaxy, along with genocide. As bad as the two previous wars were, genocide and outright targeted planetary destruction was relatively rare, and the important players were left relatively intact.
That's true, I keep hearing about the NR bungling its response and basically necessitating a total change of leadership and political procedures.
Him and the other infiltrators weakening parts of Imperial/New Republic administration is one of the better ideas of the whole invasion arc.
The war might not have been such a tremendous event if they had organized a better defense. Weren't there even a lot of political wheeling and dealing throughout the war? Like some higher ups hardly took the Vong seriously.
I tend to disagree that the NR outright "blundered" its way..... It seems to me that the NR military was in its growing pains. Having finally standardised its military doctrine and equipment, as well as setting in place a system of command & control, with officer academies and the like, the older command officers left office, letting the new ones take over.
Such a military would has been relatively hollowed out in experience, with a new equipment and doctrine. The academies that were set in place would also have faced a syllabus revamp, moving away from insurgency and combat skills and introducing logistics, command and other doctrinal issues neglected during the civil war.
Faced with political and stragetic problems, the NR couldn't mobilise its strength sufficiently to take on the Yuzhan Vong, until Coruscant fell. This when combined with political issues such as Borsk initial cover-up of the invasion, the initial decision to not attack but rather negotiate(brought about by the weakness of the NR military?) explains the perception.
Let him land on any Lyran world to taste firsthand the wrath of peace loving people thwarted by the myopic greed of a few miserly old farts- Katrina Steiner