fractalsponge1 wrote:
OK, so there's two separate points of difference then: 1) the classification of star destroyers and star dreadnoughts together as capital ships, and 2) the number of star dreadnoughts.
1)
Thanas wrote:
There is an order past SD, it is called Star Dreadnought. You seem to have me mistaken as someone who argues that the ISD and Star Dreadnought should use the same classification. I say they should both be described as capital ships or battleships, but that they should be differentiated from each other by use of Star Destroyer and Star Dreadnought.
I still do not understand how to group ships spanning three orders of magnitude of size and power into the category "capital ship" is logical. I used the Death Star = super star destroyer point facetiously to highlight this.
Star Destroyers are canonically known to be subordinate, "screening" vessels for "battleships" according to the Ep3 ICS. This fits with the Star Battlecruiser/Star Dreadnought progression through larger vessels. It seems absurd that DDs, on the galactic "Star Xxxx" scale, are battleships in role or classification. I suppose it ends up being a small semantic difference. I say ISDs can be used in the role of local, small-scale "battleship," but at the level of the galactic starfleet they would not rate the designation capital ship (this probably boils down to which end scale of the naval service you would be viewing the situation from).
In my opinion ships should be classed as to their actual role. Thus, as the vast, overwhelming majority of ISDs we see serve as capital ships (aside from the small sample of commands that have dreadnoughts and even then there is a vast multitude of real screening vessels like Carracks or Strike class cruisers) I think it would be quite unfair to not give them that designation. Heck, they have served as flagships of the Empire both under Thrawn and under subsequent leaders. To argue that the Chimaera was not a capital ship is IMO arguing against the vast majority of evidence.
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2)
Hm, I think I am not making my point clearly enough.
Thanas wrote:
Just because the ICS says they were put in service at Kuat, an immensely important system, that does not mean they were in abundance anywhere else.
Did I say they were abundant? I don't think they were 1 per sector, but I don't think they form the vanishingly small population you are positing.
So...how many Executor class ships were there in your opinion?
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Potential roles for the Imperial central forces include not only overwhelming any rogue Imperial sector group, but at least a significant combination of
potentially disloyal member state militaries. Otherwise, the Empire would hardly be the galactic hegemon, would it?
Thanas wrote:
This might also offer an explanation on why there are so very few Dreadnoughts - of course Kuat would have no incentive to supply many of them to the Empire, instead focusing on turning out ISDs which are a far lesser threat to Kuati interests.
Thanas wrote:
I would really say that KDY is exceptional in every way, considering it seems to own most major shipyards in the galaxy and has not one, but two important subsidiary shipyard worlds....
So is the interpretation to be that the Empire is simply primus inter pares among the powers Core Worlds, dependent on the whims of major powers like Kuat for its military core? Or is it actually the galactic hegemon by force of arms and depth of resources, able to procure and field the most powerful weapons in the galaxy from whatever source it chose? Keep in mind that DS2 was constructed in secret from central government resources, and embodied the material of millions of Star Destroyers.
No, my view is that it is the galactic hegomon through the political power of Palpatine first and foremost, second through its vast military which outnumbers and outclasses every core world (thanks to the massive ISD superiority) and third due to lack of political willpower. It is my opinion that the empire can easily defeat and subjugate/starve out any core world.
When it comes to Kuat and Corellia, which IMO are special cases due to them being the biggest shipyards, the Empire could defeat them but it would cost them the loss of shipbuilding capacity.
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Also, ownership of production does not equate a monopoly on use.
Please show me where I ever argued that Kuat does have a monopoly on use. The Empire controls Fondor, where it can built SSDs.
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If so, KDY and the standing military forces of Kuat Sector should be the core of galactic defense. So we should hear a lot about Kuati admirals and former KDY security ships in the Clone Wars - but we don't, instead we get new build warships for galactic buyers (i.e. the Republic and Empire). I don't doubt it's probably the largest supplier of warships to the galaxy, but it seems like a stretch to suggest that its business model is to simply supply itself alone with ships.
And where was I arguing that?
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The point of listing the major worlds (that have been seen to date) is not to list all the big shipyards. As I said, it is a list of merely some of the states with access to resources that could enable them to operate large militaries. Whether they buy them from CEC or KDY or build them themselves doesn't matter; as you yourself said earlier, they have had thousands of years to build up. What was the point of maintaining such large warship building capacity at Kuat, Fondor, or any number of places, if not to supply the other major member states as well as the Republic (when it fielded significant forces) with equipment? Or are we to assume that these massive shipyards, which built the Empire's galaxy-spanning fleet within a generation, simply exist to maintain the local military alone? The House of Tagge, despite having no huge shipyards known on the scale of Kuat or Corellia, fielded ships that (though ambiguously sized), look to be at least bigger than 3km (anonymous star battlecruisers 1-2 from SWTC). They might have simply bought them from KDY, who might also have marketed bigger ships. Does it not stretch credulity that Kuat built a planet girding shipyard over generations to build a few Mandators and Procurators for itself and no one else?
This has what to do with my point? If you want to argue that Kuat has a substantive military, fine, do so. But that does not mean any other planet has them or any other ships even approaching the size of the Executor. In General, the starwars galaxy is very undermilitiarized. Heck, according to he Imperial sourcebook, five ISDs are enough to guarantee space superiority in a major system.
And if the Kuati really fielded "squadrons" of SSDs as you claim, where were those when Kuat was attacked four times in a row? Did they all take collective naps? The point is the only time we see them appear is during the clone wars and even then they are not numerous enough to protect Coruscant. After the clone wars, they are never mentioned again. When Kuat is attacked during the Imperial reign, no Kuati local forces worth speaking off exist.
This leads me to conclude that if these ships existed past the clone wars, there was either a general disarmament or the Empire simply gained control of them/scrapped them because when Kuat is attacked, they did not respond and were not present.
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Also, keep in mind the events of TPM; given the Star Dreadnought/Star Destroyer division you are proposing, the Trade Federation put into the field at one planet thousands of potential Star Dreadnoughts (certainly the war conversion variants of these hulls are in the double-digit ISD range for power generation, by reactor space if nothing else).
Actually, they apparently suck at power generation and warship design, as 4 -12 Venators (depending on what source you use) are enough to drive off a Lucrehulk.
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These were however presumably no match for the collection of central and member state forces that could be brought to bear against the Federation, since they feared Senate intervention. If the naval forces of the Federation (or the rapidly upgraded force available to them) were actually stronger than the navies of central authority or the major member states, why worry so much?
Because the trade federation needed someone to trade with? Because the Neimoidians are notorious cowards? Note that once they had a strong coalition of allies, they did attack and cause severe casualties.
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The military of the Empire would have had to replicate this role; commands such as Azure Hammer would have taken the lead. Does it seem credible that 57 ISDs and 1 SSD would deter a few thousand Lucrehulks if it came to it? Again, a third of the mobile forces of the Core to match a single member state equivalent?
Assuming that the Trade Federation, which was certainly among the most powerful groupings in the galaxy, had thousands of ISD equivalents, there is no reason to assume the Imperial Starfleet could not have concentrated an equal number of ISD equivalents against them. But no such groupings on even a similar power level to the Trade Federation seem to exist under the empire anymore, so the point is moot anyway.
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Thanas wrote:
Why not? The Empire went from basically non-existing central military to central military in the span of what, less than two decades?
Yet it built at least 25000 ISDs, and embodied unknown numbers of Venator and Victory class ships, as well as numerous Executors at least in the combined EU (Executor, Iron Fist, Intimidator (+2?), Annihilator, Lusankya, Reaper, Terror, Vengeance (Balance of Power Vengeance), Guardian, Aggressor, Whelm (possible)). As well as other intermediate warships such as the ships in the Byss cordon (would you argue that they are one-offs?), and ships such as the two Eclipses and four Sovereigns. What were the giant naval shipyards at Kuat and elsewhere used for this doing for the millenia previous, if not equipping member state and central government militaries?
Building freighters? We know that largescale freighters of the SWVerse easily outmass most warships. As for the ships around Byss, I would argue that they are indeed one-offs as they are never seen again and not even mentioned in any other media besides Dark Empire (except for the possible Shockwave, which might be Allegiance class or a similar-sized ship).
Furthermore, the fact that it took at least eight years for the Eclipse to be built suggests that building large-scale warships is not something that is standard and that smaller ships most likely took priority.
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Thanas wrote:
No, I cannot prove a negative. It is up to you to show that the battleships were existing at Coruscant. Their abscence from the central attack on the enemy flagship and enemy center seems to suggest that they do not exist.
You realize that's basically like saying "No other Executors were used in the most pivotal battle of the Rebellion, so there must not have been more." The existence of other ships of the class is indicated in other sources, just as the presence of Star Dreadnoughts and "battleships" [warranting an escort of Star Destroyers] is shown by the ICS, and intermediate sized vessels in comics and games. There are plausible reasons that no more than one dreadnought was used at Endor, in the same way there are plausible reasons no Star Dreadnoughts were shown in RotS.
This would be an apt point if the fleet at Endor would have had the objective of destroying the Rebeliion. It did not. The DSII was supposed to provide the main firepower there. Meanwhile, protecting the capital of the known worlds is a whole other matter, especially when there is at least one Trade Federation fortress world in close proximity to Coruscant. I would expect the capital to be protected by the best forces in the war if it can be attacked directly. Yet there are no Dreadnoughts. There are no Dreadnoughts used in any other battle we have seen depicted so far, either in comics nor in the novels nor in the TV series. This leads me to conclude that once more, they were under local control and not turned over to the Republic. This is different from the Battles regarding the EU after Yavin - there dreadnoughts are clearly mentioned in taking part in battles.
Why is there not a single dreadnought at the galactic capital? To my knowledge, the novelization does not mention even one dreadnought. Surely, if the Trade Federation fleet was so powerful, there needed to be at least one there instead of puny Venators? So either the Republic general staff is incompetent or there were too little dreadnoughts to go around. Or the Venators (and by extensions ISD) are enough to safeguard systems from potential attacks, in which case the additional expense of a Star Dreadnought is not necessary. In which case the same would apply to the Empire as it faces far lesser threats.