tlb wrote:But the spies were still there when these weapons were used. Even if they did not know the full technical details, enough could be ascertained from the raids using Apollo and the Battle of Manticore to see that this eliminated any chance of the SLN defeating Manticore. Moreover the Onion knew this, because it was the reason for the accelerated implementation of Oyster Bay.
If you want to argue the Malign could have expected Haven to win as of the start of the conflict, I agree. The problem comes as they follow the course of the war and do not make sufficient effective adjustments. The only adjustments they did make were the fiascos in the Talbot Quadrant and the accelerated Oyster Bay and Houdini.
They still pushed the SLN into a one sided war, like pushing chicks into a pool of piranhas.
First, I think that Apollo was not a factor in the war, since its production having been curtailed during Oyster Bay, they weren't majorly used. So whether the planners estimated its abilities correctly or not, they removed it from the board. Plus, Oyster Bay wasn't designed to make Manticore an easier target for the League, but instead an easier target for Haven.
Haven wasn't as advanced as Manticore and, if they had won, it would take time for them to put the Manticoran technology into production for their own, which made them have a window of opportunity.
I still think they underestimated the capabilities of both the RMN and the RHN, they overestimated those of the SLN and they overestimated their ability to play catch-up. Those were serious mistakes, but understandable. Until they fought someone else, the RMN+GSN+IAN's capabilities were only measured against those of the PRN/RHN, which were also increasing. Their offensive and defensive doctrines were evolving in lockstep. And the multi-thousand-missile attacks and parries only started after the tech pipeline had been cut, with Operation Cutworm. By that time, Monica was already going on.
The overestimation of the SLN was caused in part by themselves, by deliberately muddying the data that they themselves would later need. The SLN began a self-reinforcing cycle of lying to itself, with no true metrestick with which to measure itself until the conflict had actually started. And the planners may have bought into those same lies -- even partially!
I don't know if they expected Monica to succeed: 11 BCs against nothing heavier than a CA? Maybe. Maybe not against the Lynx Terminus itself, but anywhere else. Anisimovna at the time clearly thought so, but she wasn't inner Onion yet. But let's say Monica was always destined to be defeated, only one more entry in a series of mounting excuses for Crandall eventually moving her SDs. (Byng was clearly destined to be destroyed, but his personality and the way he was transferred from BF to FF was a factor, plus at the time the RMN already had BCs in Talbott)
The SLN had 2000 active SDs at the time. As they said in the books, "quantity is a quality of its own", so maybe they expected the SLN to eventually prevail. If Crandall succeeded, however horrific her losses may have been, she'd be in possession of Spindle and the MAlign would have access to captured Manticoran tech. At the time, they'd start moving actually competent admirals into positions, not loose cannons like Byng and Crandall (it seems Filaretta was competent, despite his character flaws). Those 2000 SDs, supported by tens of thousands of escorts, with MAlign technology out of Darius, could conceivably be expected to succeed.
In the end, it really didn't matter who won, so long as both equally lost.
That is, until the Battle of Spindle, the battle with the most lopsided outmassed opponent has ever won. At that point, it was glaringly obvious the SLN was not going to win. The question was only how badly they'd lose. So why didn't they cool off at this point?