@kzt
Why do you disagree, because they brought ammunition ships along? This too would have been possible in a hypothetical offensive in the Fall of 1921.
@ThinksMarkedly
dispute that it is nepotism in the first place. It may look like nepotism and in most companies and functioning governments, you try to avoid even the appearance of nepotism or collusion or similar problems. But what happens when the skilled and qualified people are your relatives? Should you not avail yourself of their services?
Well first this extreme situation is highly unlikely to come up in the first place in functioning governments and when it does, it’s very much frowned upon and with good reason. It’s usually a bit more subtle, to say the least.
The issue is also aggravated to some extent by the fact that the Honorverse is a book series and RFC simply didn’t want to introduce more and more naval officers this far along in the story.
In the real world, this simply wouldn’t happen, because there would be scores of other qualified people (and frankly, much more qualified people in the case of White Haven’s cabinet position) to do the job and someone else would get picked.
In-universe, the logical solution would have been to give him Eighth Fleet again, while Honor get’s Third Fleet and Kuzak gets a position in the Admiralty House. She’s due for a shore post anyway.
But once your Commander in Chief and Sovereign orders you to do it now, the RMN was duty-bound to obey. Unless they had serious misgivings and convinced the Queen otherwise, but it seems that everyone ended up agreeing.
Everyone as in the Queen and Hamish at a Cabinet meeting while the people with actual jurisdiction over the matter in question where not present.
Obviously you obey the Commander in Chief. But you also make sure that the Commander in Chief in thoroughly briefed and presented with a wide variety of options.
During the fateful Cabinet meeting, the Queen just rambles on and on to the Cabinet about her thoughts on military matters. The First Lord barely puts in anything and when he does it’s mostly crap. The Queen pushes for action and it turns out there’s nothing on the table but a month old, outdated attack plan.
But I’ve already been over this in great detail in my post to Galactic Sapper.
The point is, the Queen didn’t get anything she needed from the Admiralty that day. And it’s because White Haven was the wrong guy for the job and incapable of telling the Queen that all this should be a matter she needs to discuss with her Space Lords if she really feels the need to, not him or the freaking Cabinet.
A secondary or tertiary target wouldn't have put the same pressure on the RHN as picking primary targets did. The RHN couldn't possibly defend all 300 systems: that's about 2 SDs per system and against that, the RMN would easily rollover. The population of those planets would be irate and may want to later secede, possibly even triggering a domino effect, but the RoH could absorb those blows. Besides, those secondary and tertiary targets weren't much of a target in the first place, didn't contribute to the war effort, and did not exert the same level of political influence over the Havenite government
Sure, not the same pressure. But would have put it enough pressure on the RHN? I believe instead of raiding one big target and attack on four, five, six systems would have had much of the same effect.
I'm not a military strategist, but it seems to me that if you don't control the initiative, you are controlled: you let the enemy choose when and when to fight. Since you don't know when and where he'll choose, you are already at a disadvantage. And that's no way to fight a war. Or to compete in business. Or marketing campaigns. Or spinning news, for that matter.
Allowing Haven to retain the initiative would be dangerously risky. Remember that they were still thinking of Theisman and Pritchart as Peeps, especially after the attempted assassination of Queen Berry and Princess Ruth. The RoH wanted only to go back to the negotiating table and end the war, but the PRH would have continued the war until Manticore was defeated.
To quote Bonaparte – Never interrupt your enemy when he is making an mistake.
Theisman demonstrated with Gobi that Haven was not going for a decisive blow just yet and Manticore had the time it needed to get Apollo deployed.
Yes, there would have been another overall inconclusive attack at some point after the summit talks collapsed. So what. The purpose of warfare is victory, not to deny your enemy every move he might make. Defend everything at any cost is a dangerous idea, unfortunately for some weird reason also deeply enshrined in Manticoran strategic thinking during the Second Havenite and especially during the Solarian War. It was very much not the case during the first war though, and Caparelli frequently invited enemy attacks to gain a strategic advantage.
Anyway, just let Theisman think his initiative of the moment will amount to anything in the long run. He’s running down the clock to his own destruction and doesn’t even know it.
And as said, if you really, really don’t like this very defensive approach, just do another Cutworm style raid on some secondary targets. There’s nothing wrong with that, just don’t, under any circumstance show Theisman that he’ll lose in six months by revealing Apollo.
Therein lies the problem: Theisman could have been more aggressive. In a war, you cannot hope your enemy will be nice to you.
But he DEMONSTRATED he isn’t more aggressive. There is no reason to think he’ll be much more aggressive and go for a decapitating blow just after the talks collapsed.
Again to reiterate, the only way Theisman could win the war after the talks collapsed was an attack all-out attack on the Manticore system itself. AAC makes it very clear that no one, especially no one in the RMN thought an attack like this was in the cards in the short term. Everyone expected Theisman to just continue what he started with Gobi.
This means the war is won for Manticore if you don’t give Theisman any reason to change his approach. Which is exactly what they did with attacking Lovat with Apollo.
I don't agree with your analysis and my argument is on previous posts. But to address it again: unlike the PRH/PRN, which couldn't change its strategic direction, the war with the RHN was constantly evolving. Haven changed the strategic situation and proved so at the Battle of Solon. Non-Apollo raids were simply not possible: Eighth Fleet wasn't strong enough to absorb another trap, let alone two or three that would be required before sufficient Keyhole II-equipped wallers were ready, especially since all new construction would be going to a hidden fleet somewhere (probably Third). If Eighth Fleet became combat-ineffective, then the Alliance would be entirely on the defensive.
A change in naval disposition like at Solon is not a strange in strategy but a tactical adaption. The strategic stage of the RHN didn’t change between Cutworm II and III. It also didn’t change between Cutworm III and would be Sanskrit if it hadn’t been for the talks.
Also again, there were a lot of systems the RHN couldn’t defend like Solon or Lovat. Attacks in those tertiary systems would have been still possible. Maybe not to the same effect, but as written multiple times at his point, more wouldn’t have been necessary anyway.
Manticore would have won the war outright by simply doing nothing at all after the talks collapsed.
Those ships were not Apollo-capable. The hulls laid during the first war but not completed did not have Keyhole II. Any of them that far too advanced in construction had instead to be refit, which meant probably complete the ship before refitting. And Manticore had to clear the shipyards before it could bring in the ships for the refit in the first place, unlike the GSN and IAN which had spare capacity.
They wouldn't have helped Eighth Fleet against Haven. They were probably sent to Ninth Fleet in Silesia and Tenth Fleet in Talbott. That's probably why Caparelli was talking to Gold Peak about them.
Some of the 50 that were Apollo-capable were given to Eighth Fleet. 48 of them (or so) showed up in Haven in early 1922. But we don't know when they actually got ready. Honor saying that she was hoping to get 50 for Jouet did not mean it would have happened in time. And besides, she would have needed to work them up, so attacking Jouet was some two months away (late August 1921 at least). And that's against Jouet: to go through Capital Fleet in Haven, I would expect even more training and more construction.
Of course, those 35 Invictus at Manticore were finished with Keyhole 2 capability. We know they were Invictus Class ships because House of Steel puts the number build at ‘53+’.
Invictus class ships don’t require a refit to handle Keyhole 2. Only Medusas and Harringtons require a refit since those were designed without any Keyhole capability and even Keyhole 1 was refitted on them later.
For Invictus class ships you basically just swap out the Keyhole models itself. No modification to the ship required.
Textev from AAC:
[White Haven] “However, at this time, Eighth Fleet is the only formation we've got which is fully trained with the new weapons. It's also the only formation that's equipped with the new weapons, because only the Invictus and the Graysons' late-flight Harringtons—" he smiled wryly at the class name, despite his somber mood "—can operate them without refitting. "
"Why is that?" Grantville asked. "I thought the pods were the same dimensions?"
"They are, but only the ships built with Keyhole capability from the outset can handle the Mark Two platforms, and they're essential to making the new missiles work. We can refit with Keyhole II—in fact, the decision to build that in is part of what's delayed the Andermani refits—but it requires placing the ship in yard hands for at least eight to ten weeks. And, frankly, we can't stand down our existing ships that long when we're this tightly strapped. All our new construction is being altered on the ways to be Keyhole II-capable, and when it starts coming into commission, we can probably start pulling the older ships back for refit.”
So sorry but your entire argument is flawed. Those ships were just about not combat-ready during BoMa but would have been available for a later Fall offensive.
Also, not 'some of the 50 were given to Eighth fleet' Eighth Fleet got 50 Apollo wallers. The IAN Admiral informed Honor he was coming with at least 35 IAN Keyhole 2 wallers. Possible more.
And seriously, do you really think they sent Invictus SDPs to Silesia when they had old style SDs and non Keyhole 1 SDPs in Home Fleet?