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Honorverse ramblings and musings

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Re: Honorverse ramblings and musings
Post by cthia   » Thu Aug 28, 2014 4:29 am

cthia
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The British and American ships were doing just fine until the invention of the slow undetectable German U-boats.

MAlign ships are slow undetectable ships.

The MAlign just introduced submarine warfare to the Honorverse! :lol:


****** *

Wish I could take the credit 'cause it's funny as hell. But my niece's brain served this one up.

Son, your mother says I have to hang you. Personally I don't think this is a capital offense. But if I don't hang you, she's gonna hang me and frankly, I'm not the one in trouble. —cthia's father. Incident in ? Axiom of Common Sense
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Re: Honorverse ramblings and musings
Post by cthia   » Thu Aug 28, 2014 4:49 am

cthia
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cthia wrote:The British and American ships were doing just fine until the invention of the slow undetectable German U-boats.

MAlign ships are slow undetectable ships.

The MAlign just introduced submarine warfare to the Honorverse! :lol:


****** *

Wish I could take the credit 'cause it's funny as hell. But my niece's brain served this one up.

The renewed German campaign was effective, sinking 1.4 million tons of shipping between October 1916 and January 1917. Despite this, the political situation demanded even greater pressure, and on 31 January 1917, Germany announced that its U-boats would engage in unrestricted submarine warfare beginning 1 February. On 17 March, German submarines sank three American merchant vessels, and the U.S. declared war on Germany in April 1917.

Yep. The MAlign launched (npi) the era of submarine warfare and even used torpedoes. They also mimicked Pearl Harbor. Damn smart asses!
Operation Oyster Bay, referred to by most non-Mesans as the Yawata Strike and by treecats as the Day of Sorrow, was a massive military assault on the Manticore System and the Yeltsin's Star System by the Mesan Alignment Navy.
It was carried out in February 1922 PD after a long phase of planning and preparation, and was a terrible blow to both star systems.

Contents[show]
Prelude Edit
The Alignment originally intended to strike in the Republic of Haven as well, but due to certain unexpected events in the Talbott Quadrant, and especially in light of the Battle of Manticore, Albrecht Detweiler decided to accelerate the operation and carry out only the Manticoran Alliance part with goals to destroy new generation Apollo-capable ships in shipyards and stop their missile production.
However, only the second goal was reached, as most of new ships had already left their building docks. (SI2)

Primary attacks Edit
There were actually six separate attacks on the Manticore System itself, one for each inhabited planet's orbital infrastructure, and each divided into two separate waves, although they were carefully synchronized to form a single, devastating blow. (HH12)
Results Edit
Military damage Edit
See here for a full list of Oyster Bay casualties.
Manticore Edit
Space stations
HMSS Hephaestus, the Royal Manticoran Navy's primary space station and home port, was hit by eighteen graser torpedoes and completely destroyed.
HMSS Vulcan was also completely destroyed.
HMSS Weyland was also completely destroyed, but the loss of life was minimal due to a surprise emergency evacuation exercise in effect at the time of the attack.
The loss of life aboard the space stations was estimated at 5.4 million.
Additional loss of life from the attacks on the orbital shipyards amounted to 396,000, with more being killed aboard small craft and private vessels that found themselves caught in the crossfire.
The majority of the dispersed orbital yards were destroyed[1]
Ships
There were also significant losses of ships, including:

Edward Saganami-C-class heavy cruisers:
HMS Jessica Rice (brand new vessel)
HMS Hexapuma (during repairs)
Roland-class destroyers completing their final fitting out, with almost their full complements embarked:
HMS Barbarossa
HMS Saladin
HMS Yamamoto Date
Two yard tugs in the HMSS Hephaestus area
Yeltsin's Star Edit
The Blackbird Yard was completely destroyed with almost 100 percent of the workforce. Because it was located far away from Grayson, there were no collateral casualties like at Manticore. However, High Admiral Wesley Matthews was at Blackbird at the time of the attack and was killed. (HH12)
"Collateral" damage Edit
Multiple fragments of HMSS Vulcan hit the Tannerman Ocean on the planet Sphinx. The resulting impact surge killed more than 10,000 people in dozens of small coastal towns, including Tanners Port, and inflicted billions of dollars worth of damage. Several fragments also hit the city of Yawata Crossing, destroying it completely.
The human death toll on Sphinx was approximately 7.448 million.[2] The treecat death toll was close to 9,000.

On Manticore only 200 people were killed. (HH12)

Aftermath Edit
Oyster Bay had catastrophic consequences for Manticore's economic and military strength: most of the workforce trained to build ships of war was gone, as was most of the missile-building capacity. More than 13 million people were killed, and no one even knew where the attack came from. Queen Elizabeth III, however, made it clear that she would not allow her Empire to fall before its enemies.
First Space Lord Thomas Caparelli assumed full responsibility for the Royal Manticoran Navy's inability to prevent the attack, and offered his resignation to both First Lord of the Admiralty White Haven and the Queen herself. They both refused to consider it; partially in the belief there had been no way to predict the sudden technology shift, partially because of the possibility of the media perceiving it as a desperate attempt to find a scapegoat.

Protector Benjamin IX recalled Judah Yanakov to Grayson to take over the position of High Admiral. (HH12)

Son, your mother says I have to hang you. Personally I don't think this is a capital offense. But if I don't hang you, she's gonna hang me and frankly, I'm not the one in trouble. —cthia's father. Incident in ? Axiom of Common Sense
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Re: Honorverse ramblings and musings
Post by cthia   » Thu Aug 28, 2014 5:47 pm

cthia
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I've been brooding over a failed attempt to recruit my Romanian friends to the forum because I knew that they would have significant, entertaining, and even profound input. I recently gave up on the attempt. Sadly.

I received an email shortly ago. Seems a quite pregnant discussion broke out about the perceived cost of drugs in the Honorverse spurred on by the high cost of prolong. Some think medicine will potentially cost more. Some think that's crazy. These are all MDs, Surgeons, etc.

We missed that concert guys.

Son, your mother says I have to hang you. Personally I don't think this is a capital offense. But if I don't hang you, she's gonna hang me and frankly, I'm not the one in trouble. —cthia's father. Incident in ? Axiom of Common Sense
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Re: Honorverse ramblings and musings
Post by Yow   » Thu Aug 28, 2014 6:48 pm

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cthia wrote:I've been brooding over a failed attempt to recruit my Romanian friends to the forum because I knew that they would have significant, entertaining, and even profound input. I recently gave up on the attempt. Sadly.

I received an email shortly ago. Seems a quite pregnant discussion broke out about the perceived cost of drugs in the Honorverse spurred on by the high cost of prolong. Some think medicine will potentially cost more. Some think that's crazy. These are all MDs, Surgeons, etc.

We missed that concert guys.

Where's the bootleg?

Cthia's father ~ "Son, do not cater to the common belief that a person has to earn respect. That is not true. You should give every person respect right from the start. What a person has to earn is your continued respect!"
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Re: Honorverse ramblings and musings
Post by cthia   » Thu Aug 28, 2014 7:50 pm

cthia
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Yow wrote:
cthia wrote:
I've been brooding over a failed attempt to recruit my Romanian friends to the forum because I knew that they would have significant, entertaining, and even profound input. I recently gave up on the attempt. Sadly.

I received an email shortly ago. Seems a quite pregnant discussion broke out about the perceived cost of drugs in the Honorverse spurred on by the high cost of prolong. Some think medicine will potentially cost more. Some think that's crazy. These are all MDs, Surgeons, etc.

We missed that concert guys.

Where's the bootleg?

I wish!

Unfortunately, not possible. There are 22 total friends. 19 in medical field. 2 engineers. 1 physicist. They all speak Romanian. The discussions happened orally and in Romanian.

Over a three hour discussion, with hardware involved! Exhibit-A, Exhibit B, etc.

Son, your mother says I have to hang you. Personally I don't think this is a capital offense. But if I don't hang you, she's gonna hang me and frankly, I'm not the one in trouble. —cthia's father. Incident in ? Axiom of Common Sense
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Re: Honorverse ramblings and musings
Post by cthia   » Fri Aug 29, 2014 8:00 am

cthia
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Joined: Thu Jan 23, 2014 1:10 pm

Is it too far a stretch to think that Honor's Meyerdahl beta genetic modifications struck just the right balance? I'd really like to know who else in the Honorverse has the same type modifications and what their accomplishments are.

Jumping track.
I was watching a rerun of the Bionic Woman — which was a spinoff of the Six Million Dollar Man of course, and I noticed the similarities to Honor's prosthetics. Austin (Lee Majors) had a bionic right eye. Honor has a "bionic" left eye. Austin had a bionic right arm and Honor a "bionic" left arm. The Bionic Woman," Jaime Sommers (Lindsay Wagner) had similar implants as Austin — a "bionic" right arm, amplified hearing in her right ear — and they both had bionic legs.

Now RFC has spared us, for now, any replacement of Honor's legs — and us men can understand that RFC. With such lovely legs a woman has as Honor's, if they ain't broke ... don't break them — but how long before Honor ends up with a pair of legs off the shelf too?

Which brings me to a thought. One would have to be careful making love with a woman wielding bionic legs or prosthesis. Honor could dial down her arm. How did she do that? Was it manual, or an impulsive thought?

Before long, Honor could become robomander. :o :D :lol:

In the Honorverse, she'll probably cost 60M credits though.

Son, your mother says I have to hang you. Personally I don't think this is a capital offense. But if I don't hang you, she's gonna hang me and frankly, I'm not the one in trouble. —cthia's father. Incident in ? Axiom of Common Sense
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Re: Honorverse ramblings and musings
Post by cthia   » Fri Aug 29, 2014 9:55 am

cthia
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Harrington took command of a new battlecruiser, HMS Nike, in 282 AL, with Michelle Henke as her first officer. Nike was assigned as flagship for Rear Admiral Sarnow, commander of Battlecruiser Squadron 5 in Vice Admiral Park's Task Force Hancock.

After receiving a war warning from the Admiralty, Admiral Parks split up his forces, leaving Task Group Hancock 001 under Sarnow to defend Hancock. They soon found themselves forced to defend Hancock Station from a vastly superior Havenite armada. With the help of Harrington's unorthodox tactics, the task force was able to hold off the Havenites long enough for reinforcements to arrive. However, Sarnow was incapacitated, leaving Harrington in command. Captain Pavel Young's cowardice nearly cost many lives when he disobeyed orders and fled the defensive formation protecting the wounded Nike. Harrington managed to keep the rest of the formation together despite this, until she ordered them to scatter for safety when the pursuing force could no longer escape the Manticoran reinforcements. (HH3)

Why the heck did Parks split up his forces? That really pissed me off. He had Harrington and Sarnow telling him where they thought Peeps would strike, IIRC. I just don't understand why he chose to split his forces. And didn't he take the bulk of the task force with him? Parks simply disappointed me with his command ability 'onscreen'. His intuition sucks.

Son, your mother says I have to hang you. Personally I don't think this is a capital offense. But if I don't hang you, she's gonna hang me and frankly, I'm not the one in trouble. —cthia's father. Incident in ? Axiom of Common Sense
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Re: Honorverse ramblings and musings
Post by SWM   » Fri Aug 29, 2014 1:12 pm

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cthia wrote:
Harrington took command of a new battlecruiser, HMS Nike, in 282 AL, with Michelle Henke as her first officer. Nike was assigned as flagship for Rear Admiral Sarnow, commander of Battlecruiser Squadron 5 in Vice Admiral Park's Task Force Hancock.

After receiving a war warning from the Admiralty, Admiral Parks split up his forces, leaving Task Group Hancock 001 under Sarnow to defend Hancock. They soon found themselves forced to defend Hancock Station from a vastly superior Havenite armada. With the help of Harrington's unorthodox tactics, the task force was able to hold off the Havenites long enough for reinforcements to arrive. However, Sarnow was incapacitated, leaving Harrington in command. Captain Pavel Young's cowardice nearly cost many lives when he disobeyed orders and fled the defensive formation protecting the wounded Nike. Harrington managed to keep the rest of the formation together despite this, until she ordered them to scatter for safety when the pursuing force could no longer escape the Manticoran reinforcements. (HH3)

Why the heck did Parks split up his forces? That really pissed me off. He had Harrington and Sarnow telling him where they thought Peeps would strike, IIRC. I just don't understand why he chose to split his forces. And didn't he take the bulk of the task force with him? Parks simply disappointed me with his command ability 'onscreen'. His intuition sucks.

I'm no strategist, but here is the way I've been looking at it.

He was doing exactly what his force was stationed at Hancock to do. His mission was always intended as a fast reactionary force to attack at one or more of the nearby inhabited systems; he was simply following through on his mission by moving his forces to counter. He had evidence of an impending attack, so he reacted. If there actually had been attacks on those systems, he would have split his forces to counter-attack--that's exactly what he was there to do.

He had full discretion on how to react. The War Warning had gone out, so he was fully authorized--indeed, required--to counter any attacks by Haven. Exactly how he reacted was up to his best judgment. Splitting his forces to counter multiple strikes was one of the options all along.

Now, it turns out that he was suckered, and he had been advised not to do it. But remember that Sarnow was only one of his unit commanders. He had other unit commanders as well. It is not unreasonable for an officer to choose his own plan rather than that of a single subordinate's. (Honor doesn't count, as she was an advisor to Sarnow rather than to Parks.) And Parks did listen well enough to Sarnow that he modified his plan to leave a force behind in Hancock.

Splitting his forces was well within the parameters of Parks' discretion, part of the options available to him from the beginning. It turned out to be the wrong decision, but there was nothing inherently wrong with splitting forces. In fact, if he was going to trap the attacks he thought were coming, splitting his forces was the only way to do it. That it was the wrong decision is a sign that Parks is not as good a strategist as Sarnow, not a sign that he actually did anything wrong.
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Re: Honorverse ramblings and musings
Post by Hutch   » Fri Aug 29, 2014 2:07 pm

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SWM wrote:I'm no strategist, but here is the way I've been looking at it.

He was doing exactly what his force was stationed at Hancock to do. His mission was always intended as a fast reactionary force to attack at one or more of the nearby inhabited systems; he was simply following through on his mission by moving his forces to counter. He had evidence of an impending attack, so he reacted. If there actually had been attacks on those systems, he would have split his forces to counter-attack--that's exactly what he was there to do.

He had full discretion on how to react. The War Warning had gone out, so he was fully authorized--indeed, required--to counter any attacks by Haven. Exactly how he reacted was up to his best judgment. Splitting his forces to counter multiple strikes was one of the options all along.

Now, it turns out that he was suckered, and he had been advised not to do it. But remember that Sarnow was only one of his unit commanders. He had other unit commanders as well. It is not unreasonable for an officer to choose his own plan rather than that of a single subordinate's. (Honor doesn't count, as she was an advisor to Sarnow rather than to Parks.) And Parks did listen well enough to Sarnow that he modified his plan to leave a force behind in Hancock.

Splitting his forces was well within the parameters of Parks' discretion, part of the options available to him from the beginning. It turned out to be the wrong decision, but there was nothing inherently wrong with splitting forces. In fact, if he was going to trap the attacks he thought were coming, splitting his forces was the only way to do it. That it was the wrong decision is a sign that Parks is not as good a strategist as Sarnow, not a sign that he actually did anything wrong.


And it should also be noted that once Parks realized that he had been snookered, he took prompt and decisive action to return to Hancock, and from there he blitzed the Peeps at Seaford and returned to pick off a number of the 'reinforcements' the PRN had sent in anticipation of Rollin's victory.

So yeah, he made the wrong call based on the evidence he had. Every great military leader does sooner or later (Napoleon, Wellington, Lee, pick any you want--they all had bad days). But his reactions in response to that were all anyone could ask for.

IMHO as always. YMMV.
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What? Look, somebody's got to have some damn perspective around here! Boom. Sooner or later. BOOM! -LT. Cmdr. Susan Ivanova, Babylon 5
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Re: Honorverse ramblings and musings
Post by Jonathan_S   » Mon Sep 01, 2014 4:42 pm

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SWM wrote:I'm no strategist, but here is the way I've been looking at it.

He was doing exactly what his force was stationed at Hancock to do. His mission was always intended as a fast reactionary force to attack at one or more of the nearby inhabited systems; he was simply following through on his mission by moving his forces to counter. He had evidence of an impending attack, so he reacted. If there actually had been attacks on those systems, he would have split his forces to counter-attack--that's exactly what he was there to do.

He had full discretion on how to react. The War Warning had gone out, so he was fully authorized--indeed, required--to counter any attacks by Haven. Exactly how he reacted was up to his best judgment. Splitting his forces to counter multiple strikes was one of the options all along.

Now, it turns out that he was suckered, and he had been advised not to do it. But remember that Sarnow was only one of his unit commanders. He had other unit commanders as well. It is not unreasonable for an officer to choose his own plan rather than that of a single subordinate's. (Honor doesn't count, as she was an advisor to Sarnow rather than to Parks.) And Parks did listen well enough to Sarnow that he modified his plan to leave a force behind in Hancock.

Splitting his forces was well within the parameters of Parks' discretion, part of the options available to him from the beginning. It turned out to be the wrong decision, but there was nothing inherently wrong with splitting forces. In fact, if he was going to trap the attacks he thought were coming, splitting his forces was the only way to do it. That it was the wrong decision is a sign that Parks is not as good a strategist as Sarnow, not a sign that he actually did anything wrong.

And it was pointed out the Parks had no suspicion of the type of reconnaissance net the Peeps had snuck in. So he was working under the assumption that they wouldn't know he'd left Hancock unless they sent a ship to scout the inner system (which would almost certainly be detected; and a courier could alert him of in time to respond before the Peeps could likely take advantage of their knowledge.

So for Hancock the likely outcomes as he saw them were:
1) The Peeps would hit it with sufficient force to (in their opinion) crush his forces if he chose to stand and fight; or
2) The Peeps would attempt to raid or seize nearby systems bypassing Hancock.
3) No major activity in that sector.
He specifically did not believe they'd raid or attack Hancock with forces too weak to take on his concentrated force because they'd have no way to know his force wasn't home. (And once he discovered his error he immediately re-concentrated his forces and headed back to Hancock)

He left Sarnow and Honor primarily to drive off or destroy any scouting missions, to delay the Peeps realization that he's moved his forces elsewhere.


And in the first scenario it's arguably better to have his forces elsewhere else. Hancock is a nice base but it's not worth losing a noticeable fraction of the Mantie's wall holding. Better to let it fall and then clear it back out with a reenforced attack. (Admittedly a bit of a gamble, but Parks rated defending the inhabited systems around Hancock as worth the risk of losing the repair base and it's personnel)

In the second scenario it's also arguably better to have his forces elsewhere. That gives a much better chance to have some Peep raid break its teeth on Park's battle squadrons (and their towed pod surprise) by running into them in some system that's supposed to be lightly defended until the nodal response force can arrive. Secretly uncovering Hancock might well have let Parks whittle down the forces facing him as smaller raids blunder into him. (Plus of course providing the best chance to keep those inhabited Allied worlds from having their in-system traffic and orbital infrastructure from being trashed in the interval between the raiding forces arrival and when a nodal force from Hancock could arrive to engage them; or more likely just cause them to scamper off unhurt)

And in the third plausible scenario it doesn't much matter where his ships are because the war won't be kicking off there.


Yes Parks could have adopted a more aggressive posture, but that did run the risk that even if he could guarantee that no Peeps could sneak past him out of Seaford Nine his nodal force would be totally out of position to defend or react to any other attack on Hancock or the other systems he was responsible for defending.

In hindsight Honor and Sarnow were more right, but only because of information that nobody at the time knew (the Argus net).



Heck, the Peeps original plan was the scenario 1 I outlined above. Reenforcing Seaford Nine enough that they had what should have been a decisive advantage over Parks and then proceeding directly to punch out his battle squadrons at Hancock. (Now whether that actually would have worked in the face of the SD towed pods that the Peeps didn't know about is an interesting question in and of itself)

But the way things actually went down gave Parks an unexpected gift of being able to fight the Peep forces in detail (instead of concentrated); which he wouldn't have had if he'd either stayed in Hancock or picketed Seaford Nine.
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