Author Topic: Forging the Future: Coming Home  (Read 16956 times)

Korzon77

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Forging the Future: Coming Home
« on: 24 October 2012, 23:13:37 »
Yvonne tried to stay calm. A year of training, and before that, convincing her parents.

"This May be safe."  She had said, but you yourself said it might not be, and they'll be going up against the Clans.  I'm not in the line for the Throne and its our duty to show the people that we'll take the risk...like you did."  Hanse and Melissa had agreed, eventually, they didn't have any choice.  The bitter truth was that the leaders of the Houses, and their families were heirs of a tradition that demanded service.. like Victor.

She shook her head in her womb, tiny compared to a battlemech cockpit, the 9 tones of armor and weapons wrapped around her, and a cocoon of ceramic reentry panels wrapped around that. Five others in this modified drop bay, 30 total in the Leopard-P class dropship. She let the neural feedback enter her mind, piggybacking off of the sensors of the dropship, showing the fleet burning in towards Tharkad. 

the Clans weren't stopping them-- why should they?   Half of the Clans success had been due to forces rushing to repel the invaders, before being cut to pieces piecemeal.  Now they had Tharkad, were driving on Luthian and even Terra, and only the fact they'd outrun their supply lines had slowed them down.  Their warships were in orbit, but they wouldn't fire on anyone coming in-- trying to leave, now that would be a different matter.

"All units."  The voice came over the link, "Proto's will commence the drop in the assigned regions. Vehicle and Special  combat units will join them."

Hopefully the Clans didn't know about the Proto's or the other fruits of the labs of Terra and the Great Houses.

"Ready Yvonne?"  The voice came through the link, one of her own squad.  Marie, from the Magistracy. 

"Yes."  Yvonne said, "After all, it's home." She continued as the occupied world of Tharkad continued to grow in the sensors as the diversionary aerospace and assault ship strike went in, trying to close to engage the Clan vessels in orbit. No big assault ships-- there were Warships in orbit and large assault ships simply made better targets. 

"Coming into the dropzone."  The drop-master said, "All protos stand by."    The ship started shuddering, the feel of close range misses and evasive action penetrating even into her warm cocoon. 

If I'm hit here, I'll die without ever being able to move.  Yvonne bit her lip, and waited.

"Dropping in 3, 2, 1!"  There was a kick in her pants as the drop cocoon was hurled free, the others trailing after it.  Other dropships were doing the same, protos and WIGES and LAM fighters diving towards the surface of the world.  Beyond them, barely visible were the much larger images of the Submarines, equipped with their barely tested and hopefully safe landing packs.  Yvonne didn't envy the crews of those 10,000 tonne ships at all.

"Clanners seemed to be confused!"  The tac net came alive with her commander, General Samualson, "they expected mech's--not us and infantry!" 

Yvonne smiled slightly.  Good news, bad news. Good news that they were surprised, Bad news because it would be at least a few years before the Allied forces could muster enough mechs to meet the clans even with equal numbers-- and the clan tech, to say nothing of their nightmarishly skilled warriors, made one on one engagements suicide.  Bad news, there was no certainty they couldn't do it to these forces. 

"All units, remember-- go to ground and break contact if possible. Do not engage clan forces if you encounter them. We're not here to fight a glorious battle and die...we're  here to make certain every damned clanner is pinned down on this planet instead of being free to cause trouble elsewhere." 

The general's voice faded out as the Proto descended through the denser atmosphere. Explosive bolts fired and the ceramic reentry unit was jettisoned, freeing up the integral sensors of the Proto.  Yvonne felt the wind over her "body" and looked out with the preternatural clarity that had been so difficult to get used to.  Just under her was a small town, and right beyond that was her units drop zone.

Moment's later, Yvonne Steiner-Davion touched down just outside of the McKenna Memorial Junior High School, the first member of the royal family to return to the world in over four years.  Looking for a moment at the children (some of them less than five years younger than she), looking in disbelief at the hulking proto, too large to be a man and too small to be a mech, Yvonne waved at them, before turning and vanishing into the forest that bordered the town and had been the reason for the drop zones location.


Shadow_Wraith

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Re: Forging the Future: Coming Home
« Reply #1 on: 24 October 2012, 23:23:02 »
 O0  Interesting so far on your new AU

idea weenie

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Re: Forging the Future: Coming Home
« Reply #2 on: 25 October 2012, 01:07:55 »
This looks quite interesting, I'm interested in seeing the various toys/strategies/alliance that have had to be forged as a result of these Clans.

Korzon77

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Re: Forging the Future: Coming Home
« Reply #3 on: 25 October 2012, 03:32:13 »
The Law of Unintended Consequences:

When the Clans invaded the Inner Sphere in the late months of 3049, they were unstoppable.  It was more than their tech, advanced as that was, but the average clan warrior, coming from a history of genetic tweaks and a training program that was the ultimate evolution of the best components of the SLDF's gunslinger program was simply superior.  The clan formations sliced through the first Inner Sphere units with contemptous ease.

More devastatingly, the Clans were not interested in simply taking ground-- long having studied the past, they had come to the conculsion that it didn't matter how many worlds a state could "Claim" if those worlds were isolated and without the ability to support a military.  The Clans thus focused on taking major worlds and production nodes, using their warships, dropships and aerospace assets to interdict other worlds and capture the shipping the Inner Sphere Depended on.  Eventually of course, they could retake the other worlds in the name of hte Star League-- but only after eliminating the industrial and military might of hte Great Houses, and taking Terra.

Two things saved the Inner Sphere.  The first was the simple fact that the Clans understimated the speed of their advance and in fact in some cases, pulled back after the first pellmell advances.  The time it took to restore their logistical net provided vital time for the Wolfs Dragoons and Inner Sphere to reorganize under the Central Allied Military Authority (CAMA)  perhaps fortunately, the original name, Central Allied Command Authority was not adopted. 

The Second was the Clan's decision to announce their intent-- which had the effective of bringing two groups into the CAMA.  The first group was Comstar that realized that once Terra was taken, they would have no place, and the plans to limit technological progress were now, dead, dead, dead.  The second was the Periphery-- the Clan announcement, and their fearsome military might awoke ancient memories of the Reunification wars and every group from the PSDF to the Canopians realized that if the Clans successfully conquered the Inner Sphere, their doom would be certain.

Thus, the by 3053 most of the Inner Sphere wsa functioning under an ad hoc, but more or less effective central military command.  Pundits proclaimed this doomed the clans.  The CAMA leaderhsip knew better as reports of new Clans moving up into the front lines came in-- that for all their confident words, the war was still in doubt, especially with the effective destruction of over 65 percent of the Federated Commonwealth's military, along with the loss of just over 50% of the Draconis Combine's forces.

The Clan War-- 3049-3060

New tharkad Press, 3065.


sandstorm

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Re: Forging the Future: Coming Home
« Reply #4 on: 25 October 2012, 04:27:44 »
TAGged, NARCed and dragged to photobooth... This is going to be interesting.

At first I was unsure about how the PSDF and 'Forging the Future' tied in here, but you cleared that up quick enough. Bet the Clans would pay dearly to either cripple or capture their Newgranges.

Clanners sound a little smarter than what they were, but the IS sounds much more unified from the start as well, so this is going to be nasty yet interesting war.
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Jaim Magnus

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Re: Forging the Future: Coming Home
« Reply #5 on: 25 October 2012, 08:17:03 »
Looks interesting.  But Proto's?
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sandstorm

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Re: Forging the Future: Coming Home
« Reply #6 on: 25 October 2012, 12:46:37 »
Well, it could be seen as logical.

1) Most major manufacturing centers outside of the Periphery SLDF Remnant and Terra were either taken or destroyed by Clans, or at least that's the image I get.
2) Most other production centers don't have the capacity for for Mech production and Protos use less resources
3) Original SLDF era scientists and ComStar co-operating and sharing research under single military command => better look at what can be built and how to utilize it. Might not be quite as good as Clan Protos, but having the Manei DOmini style DNI available could give them a bit of edge. Heck, might even have some sort of Nighthawk-derived camo system included... :D

And if they are fighting guerrilla war on capital worlds until the Mech forces can be rebuilt and warriors trained, Protos make more sense than either inferior Mechs or BA.
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Headshot

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Re: Forging the Future: Coming Home
« Reply #7 on: 26 October 2012, 00:18:46 »
a tradition that demanded service.. like Victor.

Somehow that sounds like the Clans got him this time...
And as always, nice to see Clanners that aren't bred without brains.
A warrior society that actually thought about effective warfare, oh how could you!  O0

Korzon77

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Re: Forging the Future: Coming Home
« Reply #8 on: 26 October 2012, 02:16:10 »
The Throne Room of the Lyran Commonwealth was empty. The battlemechs that had once guarded the throne destroyed, the occupant of the throne herself fled.  Khan Jorgensson traced the material of the trhone, letting the silence of the room fill him.

How many worlds were burned by orders given from this Throne?  he thought.  The bandit kings, the shattered worlds we passed were still full of life when the Great Father left.   Now those regions were deserts, abandoned cities, or cities full of the bones of those who hadn't been able to escape when the last fusion generators broke down.

"My Khan?"  The voice intruded onto his thoughts.  "The staff awaits you in the planning room."  The woman's voice took a sardonic tone, "They wonder why you are not eager to start hunting down the Inner Sphere scum that have so eagerly dropped into our trap."

"And you, Loremaster?"  He said, "Is that your belief, Quiaff?"

"Neg." Laurie Tseng approached the throne. "We destroyed a few of the smaller units, though we were unable to capture any of their pilots alive, and they are something different.  The Scientist caste believe that they might be related to some projects being carried out by the Star League before the Usurper..."  Her shrug was eloquent, "But they are here now."

"But why?"  The first wave of the invasion had been perfection, the Inner Sphere forces playing into their hands again and again, as Clan warships waited until relief forces were landed onto the targeted worlds, before swooping in and taking their jumpships.  Tharkad itself had been a triumph, with the Ghost Bear Toumen landing just enough forces to keep reinforcements pouring in, until they had the elite forces of the Realm in a trap.  Fortunately, the Lyran forces had accepted the Bears offer of truce for the evacuation of the civilian population, but even so, there were swaths of ruined cityscape where the last battles had been fought, to say nothing of the battlegrounds all over the world.

"You know the answer, My Khan." 

"Yes."  He sighed, "WE cannot remove the bulk of our forces while they are here, and the fact that they are trying to evade contact shows that they know it...to say nothing of the submarines they landed."  The clans, after all, hadn't brought much in the way of ASW weapons. 

Did you think it would be easy?

"This requires careful thinking."  he finally said, "They are adapting to our tactics, and we must not allow the momentum to shift away from our forces."

"We may have to reduce the number of worlds we strike in our next wave."

"We will.  But we will make certain those worlds are ones our enemies will need to defend."  Jorgensson's fist clenched.  "It does not matter how many worlds they have, if we take the factories and destroy their armies."

"The Smoke Jaguars will demand we drive for Terra."

"The Jaguars are as blood thirsty as the House Lords.  They burned an entire city in a fit of pique  They could have isolated the city, but they gave the entire Draconis Combine an atrocity to unite around."

Not to mention neutralizing one of our greatest advantages.  In order to keep the disaster from being complete, the Clans had agreed to forgo any use of orbital bombardment, even that of military units, so long as the Inner Sphere agreed. Given the disparity of their forces, the House lords and the CAMA as their new command authority was named, had fallen over their own feet agreeing.

"No.  I Know how the other Clans will vote and we will not Expose our Birthplace to another conflict like that the Usurper brought onto it.  WE will win the war, the House Lords will bow, and comstar shall grant Terra to those who are worthy of it-- without a single shot being fired, or a single drop of blood profaning her streets."

sandstorm

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Re: Forging the Future: Coming Home
« Reply #9 on: 26 October 2012, 02:39:58 »
Pretty optimistic Clanner there.
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Korzon77

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Re: Forging the Future: Coming Home
« Reply #10 on: 28 October 2012, 04:23:50 »
The Clan Juggernaut:

The Clans struck the Inner Sphere like a tide-- and their advantages were not simply in technology-- in fact by late 3060 some Inner Sphere factories were beginning to build a few clantech weapons, and others had been salvaged. 

What gave them their overwhelming advantage was their skill-- the product of generations of subtle genetic engineering, the average Clan warrior had reflexes anywhere 2-5 percent faster than his inner sphere counterpart-- and that was an average warrior.  The Inner Sphere's larger population meant that they had some soldiers who could challenge clan warriors, but it was no surprise that the initial DNI projects stemmed from the simple belief that the Clans had to be using cybernetics.  In truth the Clans did not, and showed a marked hostility to the idea, which ran counter to their over all ethos. 

Worse, the Freebirth's, far from being a despised minority, were the example of the best and most motivated of the Clan's "normal" population who were brought into the warrior caste and added their own skills to it.  The Clan war machine was not simply the result of direct genetic engineering, but adopting the top percent or so of their general population.

Finally, the Clan practice of Batchall and the customs around bondsmen meant that their best warriors seldom died, but rather were simply circulated around the Clans, spreading their knowledge and skill. 

This was not simply restricted to direct combat.  In 3054 several intelligence windfalls befell the Inner Sphere, including the Record of the "chess challenges" which had matched the various Clan strategic commanders against each other in a complex series of wargames intended to field test operation Revival-- and to ensure that that the best possible generals were in charge of it.

No. The desperation that filled the Inner Sphere and resulted in many dubious projects being fielded was not due to the technological superiority of the Clans-- but the dawning realization that the Clan forces were not simply the descendants of the SLDF-- they were actually superior to the SLDF in training, and the overall quality of their troops. 

A History Of the First Phase of the Clan Invasion

By James Willimson

Tharkad (Clan Ghost Bear Zone), 3085

sandstorm

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Re: Forging the Future: Coming Home
« Reply #11 on: 29 October 2012, 03:32:52 »
Ouch... And... that Ghost Bear Zone in 3085 sounds ominous.
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Korzon77

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Re: Forging the Future: Coming Home
« Reply #12 on: 07 November 2012, 21:59:08 »
 Good news and bad news everyone.

1. Good news. I've got just over 60,000 words worth of freelance assisgnments to finish by december.

2.  Bad news. That ain't going to leave much time for anything else. So you may be waiting a while.

serack

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Re: Forging the Future: Coming Home
« Reply #13 on: 08 November 2012, 00:06:17 »
1 gratz

2 we will still be here waiting :) 

Chaeronea

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Re: Forging the Future: Coming Home
« Reply #14 on: 08 November 2012, 07:15:12 »
Ouch... And... that Ghost Bear Zone in 3085 sounds ominous.

The fact that Tharkad was still part of the Ghost Bear Occupation Zone thirty years after it was conquered sounds even more ominous.

VhenRa

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Re: Forging the Future: Coming Home
« Reply #15 on: 09 November 2012, 00:55:24 »
Depends.

The way it is Tharkad (Ghost Bear Zone) could be like how Berlin had an American, British, French and Soviet Zone after WWII. The planet could be divided up...

Korzon77

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Re: Forging the Future: Coming Home
« Reply #16 on: 10 November 2012, 05:42:14 »
It is and it isn't.  I'll leave two spoiler hints.

1.  It is impossible in battltech to effectively create a "line" defending any group of planets because you can't interdict intersteller travel.  Because of that, conquest is more about seizing important places than every piece of territory.

2.  The clans have long since adopted this and have little problem with say, having a city with several different polities in control of various parts. 

sandstorm

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Re: Forging the Future: Coming Home
« Reply #17 on: 11 November 2012, 00:37:02 »
Strana Mechty, for example? :D
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Korzon77

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Re: Forging the Future: Coming Home
« Reply #18 on: 14 December 2012, 04:06:09 »
Drop +5 days.

Yvonne dropped and rolled, the incredible agility of the mech allowing it to avoid the majority of the explosions strength. She also felt like her body was one big bruise, even though the womb like interface cockpit was only letting a whisper of sound and shock through.  The neural interface that gave the mech its incredible agility also gave her the feeling that she, not the mech had suffered the explosion. 

At least it wasn't as bad as the first models.  Yvonne thought.  More than a few physically unharmed, but very dead, pilots had been pulled out of those first attempts.  Even as she continued the thought, the mech continued rolling, coming up and snapping a bolt from its ER medium laser, burning a chunk of armor off of the Madcat's torso.  The other members of the squad were doing the same thing, the Clan mech encompassed in a web of coherent light, it's lance-no, star mates having their own problems.   Even so, the pilot was almost as agile as they were-- and without the benefit of a direct neural interface.

Imagine the worst, most deadly mechwarriors you can.  Jaime Wolf had said, And then double that, and you will have a frontline Clan pilot.  She'd had to be very careful about speaking with Wolf though.  Mother had wanted to have him arrested.

No, Mother had wanted Outreach bombarded with fusion warheads until it glowed. The Dragoons had been here for decades, and only once half her realm was under the guns of the invader had they deigned to tell the Inner Sphere what they knew.  What was worse, some them had seemed surprised at the lack of gratitude.

"Scarlet One."  The voice came into her ears, "We've picked up multiple Clan mechs and Toads advancing to support the probe.  Prepare to break contact."

"Understood."  Yvonne said. "All units, prepare to break."

"I Obey."  Tom's voice came. They were going to have problems with him.  Evidently the psychs hadn't realized that he was hiding robot syndrome, or it hadn't been apparent until the stress of conflict had brought it out.  But he was increasingly refusing to come out of his Legionnaire for anything other than short periods.  Sooner or later, he'd refuse to come out at all, and would die.  Hopefully not shooting at them.

"Denise."  Yvonne said, "Lase them." 

"Gothca."  The Clan mechs advancing suddenly lit up in her display, Denise's scout variant painting them with coherent radiation... just in time for the first salvo of guided artillery rounds, mixed with smoke rounds to land. Yvonne saw the Madcat she'd been fighting take two rounds to the chest, and another to the arm, blowing it off. The mech shuddered, wavered but amazingly the pilot still  kept it upright.  Yvonne turned and headed into the woods, the rest of the units following her, billowing smoke obscuring them as they broke free.  The Clans wouldn't follow, she was confident.  They didn't know that her unit had run out of mines.



"These small units are causing a problem."  Tseng muttered.

"Of course they are."   the Khan said, "If we destroy a mech, they have lost all of its firepower-- but destroy one of these units and much like an infrantry force, they only lose a small part of the total firepower, Quiaff?"

"Aff."  Tseng said, "They also are, even accounting for their control system...very cunning and brave fighters."  The admission clearly cost her, but she continued, "I think we should seek to take some as bondsmen." 

"If we can." Jorgensson said, "It is difficult to explain to the Inner Sphere warriors how our customs work..."  He shook his head.  "And may be more difficult in this case-- you have noted their age."

"Aff."  Tseng said, "The Scientists believe that the cybernetic linkages may be...dangerous to use on older individuals."

"Or older individuals are more likely to question such a sacrifice."  Jorgensson said. "It is another example of Inner Sphere evil. They will fling their young into the battle if it can but purchase them another day or week.  Like Amaris, or the fanatics of the Periphery."   Can we even redeem them?  The Khan thought for a moment. Or are they utterly lost? Were the outward lookers right to argue that we should never look back?  He hardened himself against doubt.  The People of hte Inner Sphere were victims.  They had not burned their cities and squandered the glory of the greatest civilization in human history. The Clans had to hold firm, to remember that their mission was not conquest, but liberation, not to bring suffering, but to free the Inner Sphere and bring it back into the light.

"I believe that I may have a...plan that could allow us to obtain some prisoners." Jorgensson said.  "After all, if they are trying to match their strength to our weakness, we need to provide them with a very weak target to strike..."

mikecj

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Re: Forging the Future: Coming Home
« Reply #19 on: 31 December 2012, 21:49:55 »
more please
There are no fish in my pond.
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Romo Lampkin could have gotten Stefan Amaris off with a warning.

croaker

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Re: Forging the Future: Coming Home
« Reply #20 on: 02 January 2013, 23:57:56 »
Competant clanners vs Competant spheroids... oooh.

Dave Talley

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Re: Forging the Future: Coming Home
« Reply #21 on: 03 January 2013, 00:30:16 »
tag
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“Toe jam in training”

Because while the other Great Houses of the Star League thought they were playing chess, House Cameron was playing Paradox-Billiards-Vostroyan-Roulette-Fourth Dimensional-Hypercube-Chess-Strip Poker the entire time.
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snakespinner

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Re: Forging the Future: Coming Home
« Reply #22 on: 03 January 2013, 00:45:33 »
Tag
I wish I could get a good grip on reality, then I would choke it.
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Growing up is optional.
Watching TrueToaster create evil genius, priceless...everything else is just sub-par.

Korzon77

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Re: Forging the Future: Coming Home
« Reply #23 on: 04 January 2013, 06:29:32 »
I'm tremendously backlogged on paying assignemnts, but I'll try to get a bit more when I can free up some time.

Korzon77

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Re: Forging the Future: Coming Home
« Reply #24 on: 15 January 2013, 00:29:00 »
Terra

Christa frowned and tugged her uniform again.

Remind me to never let a history geek design a uniform Christa thought.  The CAMA had been uable to use other people's designs-- God help them if a Capellan decided that their uniforms looked too much like a Feddie, and of course no Lyran general worth his social cred would take orders from some Periphery officer. 

Which was why CAMA's officers had been provided with uniforms patterned after the ancient uniforms of the United States Army, circa 1945.

"Grumping about the Uniform?"  Focht asked.

"A bit." Christa muttered. "This should have been yours."

"I would never be accepted and if we waited for the Houses to pick a leader, we'd still be arguing by the time the Clan's conquered Terra." 

Christa laughed at that.  "You're likely right."

"More seriously."  Focht continued, "You're younger than most commanders, you haven't had any...political connections with a great house, you've commanded a division and most importantly of all, you got your start in primitive mechs-- which means you're ideally suited to understanding the problem these Clan mechs pose." 

"Not just the Clan mechs."  Christa said quietly.  "I'd like you to stay for this meeting."

"Of course."

"Ma'am."  The intercom chimed, "Colonel Wolf is here to see you."

"Very well, send him in."  Christa remained standing.  This was going to be bad enough without rubbing his nose in it.

Jaime Wolf was old, but still strode in with the energy that had characterized so many engagements.  He was also fairly upset, Christa realized, as they finished the pleasantries and sat down.

"General."  He said. 

"Colonel.  I have heard that you are... concerned with some of our force arrangements."

"Yes.  The plans for Outreach are going to lead to a great deal of friction between the Mercenary community and the CAMA."

"I think the mercenary community will get over it. " Christa said, "And the ones that don't may find that they'll have a problem getting further contracts."

"Outreach was granted to Wolf's Dragoons as part of our Agreement with the Federated Commonwealth."

"Yes, well, that was before we knew that you were an agent of a hostile power-- one that is currently invading the Inner Sphere."

"We attempted to prepare the Inn-"

Christa cut him off.  "By what?  Warning Comstar? Warning the PSDF?  Providing information to the Dracs and Feddies that they might want to shore up their defenses?  You helped us after a good chunk of the Inner Sphere was conquered."  She paused, "Be glad I was able to prevail on Hanse and Melissa to let me handle this, because right now, they're not exactly in a forgiving mood.  They gave you a world only to find out you decieved them about it and oh yes, set in motion the chain of events that has Victor missing and presumed dead and Yvonne volunteering for a surgical procedure with a 10% death rate.  Even if we just stick to contract negotiations, your contract with the Suns said something about providing warning of any unknown danger and you surely should know that a nation of advanced, genetically engineered warriors might just possibly...count?"  She sighed, "Believe me, It took me most of six hours last night to convince some of the leaders of the Inner sphere that the proper response wasn't to send the biggest fleet we could put together and either take Outreach or nuke it 'till it glows." 

"And why did you do that?"  Wolf asked.

"Because we need you." Christa said bluntly.  "And I know that you're not going to play along with any agreement that ends 'after we don't need you we kill you.'"  She paused and smiled, "So, Hanse and Melissa have agreed to officially cede all interests in Outreach and the System it contains to the CAMA.  In return, you tell us everything and Wolf's Dragoons become an official-- and permanent part of CAMA and subject to our command."  She paused, "This is the best offer you're going to get Colonel."

"The mercenaries associated with Outreach may not like that."

"We're the best employers around."  Christa paused, "And this doesn't go outside this room, but I'd like you to give a list of what Mercenary units might be most likely to leave and what ones have the most, ah, flexible morality." 

"For what reason?"

"The Clans are going to kill enough good men as it is.  We can use those units to hopefully absorb some losses while the Clan's do us the favor of eliminating some long-term problems."

"You're talking about murdering-"

"No." Christa said, "I'm talking about reducing the number of bloody handed thugs for hire who will provide mechs for anyone with the C-bills." She exhaled, "Or to put it differently, you know what the joke is in the Periphery:  How can tell a merc has retired?"

"How?"  Wolf said, playing along.

"He just painted a skull and crossbones on his mech and torched your town's hospital.  I joined the militia when I was seventeen.  I'm just about 40 now, and I've seen enough of what is left every time the Inner Sphere washes its sewage out into my home.  The Clans think they are going to conquer us.  They're wrong.  But they're right about one thing.  This time-- this time, things are going to be different." 

"Of course none of this is for public consumption."  Focht said, "and the Eridini Light Horse has also accepted permanent membership in CAMA."

"I expect their meeting was a bit different then this one." Wolf said, a slight smile on his face.

"More extortionate, you mean."   Christa said ruefully. "They got the right to recruit up to an old SLDF division in size." 

"I doubt we'll say no." Wolf finally responded, "Believe it or not, I'm trying to help the Inner Sphere and a war against us wouldn't do that-- where will we be posted?"

"Terra and Outreach for now."

"You could use us on the front-lines."

"And you'd get obliterated."  Christa said, "Some of our intelligence is pretty clear-- the Clans' know about your change of heart and they aren't happy."

"So what will our duties be?"

"OPfor and training."  Christa said. "We're going to be funneling enough newbies into the meatgrinder as it is, and I'd prefer that they have at least some training by people who know what they're going to face.  Also, you'll be working with CAMA and the House Militaries to develop tactics that make up for our technological limitations.  That includes helping to figure out the best way to integrate our new technologies, like the Proto's,  and a few other project designs into our general forces."

"What about the Comguards?"

"They'll retain their administrative independence, but tactically and strategically will be folded into CAMA."  Focht said. 

Wolf looked over at Christa and nodded.  "I'm coming to realize why you were appointed."

"Yeah, well none of the  House Leaders want to risk having their name in the history books under the heading of 'Leader who lost the Inner Sphere'"  Christa said. 

"So, why did you protect us?"  Wolf paused, "Beyond the practical reasons."

"What would the Houses have done if you told them about this?"   Christa asked.

"Presuming they didn't blow themselves up?"  Wolf shrugged, "Probably prepared for an all out attack on the Clan homeworlds."

"I'm just an uncivilized Periphery sort." Christa said, "But I can understand the difficulty of divided loyalties--and from what I understand the Clans may never have invaded."

"That was my hope."  Jaime said.

"Too bad it didn't come true." Christa paused. "Colonel.  I don't have any more political capital in this matter.  If you deceive us again no matter how, I can't protect you and believe me, right now, you are really not popular in some quarters. Don't make me regret this decision."





Korzon77

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Re: Forging the Future: Coming Home
« Reply #25 on: 16 January 2013, 03:10:11 »
“What the hell is that?”  Christa said quietly.

“Our newest counter to the Clans.  Project GOLEM!” The chief engineer said full of pride as Christa watched the....thing waddle out onto the tarmac.  “150 tons, armored with the most modern alloys and armed with our best weapons, this can-“

“Let me see the sheet.” Christa said.  She finished it in a moment. “This monstrosity can barely run as fast as a man!”

“That’s a bit of an exaggeration, and in any case mobility is not its...”

“Strong point?”  The voice came from Theodore Kurita, who was frowning at the mech.  “That seems short sighted given that mobility very much is a strong point of our enemies.” 

“I could buy an entire lance of heavies for the cost of one of these things.” Christa muttered, “And how are we going to get it to the combat zones?”

“Well, our plans are to modify a cargo dropper and then we can demonstr-“

“Shut. Up.”  The Supreme Commander of CAMA said in a voice colder then helium.  “Timothy.”

“Ma’am?”

“Thank you for alerting me to this... this...debacle.” She said.  “You’re not a Colonel anymore. You’re now a general.”

“I, thank you!”

“Don’t thank me yet.”  She said, turning to the former ComStar mechwarrior.  “You’re first job is to clean the Augean Stables  here.  Take what you need, but I want a report by the end of the week on what is a boondoggle, what has a chance of helping us, and what isn’t needed so we can fold it into other projects.”

“See here!” The project engineer finally recovered, “This project has-“

“Project Director.  We are losing on every front.  The Clans have stopped, not because of our skill, but because they’ve outrun their logistics net, and understand that they need to secure bases before they can continue.  Right now....”  Christa started ripping the data sheet into smaller and smaller fragments, “I have soldiers going out in mechs where they know they are going to die, just to buy us time. I have children volunteering for invasive surgery because the proto’s are some of our best option.  Ten percent of them die before they see a single clan enemy.  We ship the bodies home and tell their parents how brave they were up until the unfortunate training accident and we don’t tell them they died on an operating table like slaughtered animals. And now, I come here and find that you’ve wasted a billion C-bills, and far more unforgivably, man-years of work, on a monstrosity that would be completely bloody useless, even if it did work.  Which it doesn’t because so far you haven’t been able to run it for more than 20 minutes between mechanical failures. Be glad you’re not Kuritan, or I might be tempted to ask for a somewhat more... dramatic sign of your regret. You’ve got a day to shut this...project down.” She paused, and then in an exasperated tone, “Lyrans!”

“I’m sorry about that,” Christa told Theodore as the thoroughly deflated project director was led off.  “Every damned company has its own damned idea and so do half the house design staffs.  I don’t have time to do this, but If I didn’t support my people we’d be going to war with ten thousand prototypes.” 

“I understand.”  Theodore smiled slightly, “I’m not a stranger to...difficult organizational challenges.”  Then he lost his smile, “But you’re desire to pull units from some of our worlds is going to, I’m afraid, be very difficult to carry out.”

“Your father?” Christa said, perhaps too bluntly. Oh hell, just play off my rep for a barbarian periphery sort.

“Partially, but the warriors of the Combine are...unwilling to simply surrender the body of the Dragon to its enemies.” 

Meaning they may not obey the order. Lovely, and invasion AND a mutiny.

“If we try to defend everything we defend nothing.”  Christa said.  “We can’t win—hell, right now we can’t even draw with anything remotely close to equal numbers and the Clans aren’t hitting their primaries with equal numbers.  We had an under strength RCT on Riddermark, and the Clans nailed it with a full Division.  They’re not playing fair and they’re not playing stupid and we can afford to lose planets more than we can afford to use mechwarriors.

“I know, but our people will require some sign that this isn’t simply retreat after retreat.”  Theodore’s eyes were hooded,  “Hohiro is my son, and it took everything I had, not simply as Kanrei but as his father, to prevent him from committing seppeku when he heard of Turtle Bay.  Retreat after retreat may do the Clan’s work for them.”

“What if I can give you something in return?”

“What would that be?”

“The most advanced equipment, protomechs and such, is going to be restricted for a while.”  Christa said, “And to be honest, we’re at our limits on production for both, even ignoring fiascos like this one.  But we do have some other arrows in our quiver.”

“Such as?”

“Project Sherman.” Christa said, “It’s a 55 tonner, with limited  advanced technology...might be good for those medium ranged missiles you’re working on.”

“Limited?”

“Yeah. Because  we intend to produce a lot of them.”  Christa smiled thinly, “It’s not how I’d do things if I had the choice, but we don’t.  I can have the production designs diverted to your technical people by tonight.”

“I think that will be a sign of the commitment to our success we need...” Theodore smiled, “But the name has got to go.  Really, the uniform and the name?”



Korzon77

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Re: Forging the Future: Coming Home
« Reply #26 on: 16 January 2013, 05:44:48 »
The Clans' Logistics Juggernaut

When the Clans first invaded, the Inner Sphere was shocked at their speed.  Entire Galaxies of troops attacked in one place and then less than a week later, were confirmed to have moved to worlds over a hundred light years away. The Inner Sphere and CAMA  were convinced that the Clan's had access to some super jump system.

The truth, when CAMA uncovered it in late 3057, was almost worst, coming as it did in during the absolute disaster of Operation Thunder, including as it did the Deaths of Hanse and Melissa and the effective collapse of the Federated Commonwealth into dozens of fragmented successor states.

The Clans had, after all never lost the technology for large scale jump ship production and in the years before operation Revival, had produced hundreds of bare bones designs.  Their lack of amenities was acceptable, for they weren't general designs-- they had to go only a few places, and serve as links in a logistics chain that stretched from teh Clan Homeworlds to the Inner Sphere.

For almost two years before the first attacks, the Clans had established deep penetration bases throughout the Inner Sphere, centered on uninhabited (and often planetless) star systems.  Recharging stations with oversized light sails permitted ships to quickly recharged from regions far beyond the orbit of jupiter, well beyond any place Inner Sphere ships might look for. Where the Federated Suns had struggled to maintain pony express links for messages and light cargo, a the Clans could move dozens of jumpships from the Homeworlds to the Inner Sphere-- and do it in less than a month or even faster.

Even so, the capacity of the system was limited when the scale of Revival was considered, and so the Clans made use of local logistics systems when possible, but more than once an Inner Sphere task group jumped into a world that was garrisoned by only reserve Clan forces to find front line units arriving impossibly fast.

The need to disrupt the network played a major role in the Devleopment of the Dragon's Teeth Jump Capable AI combat systems, which would so plague the Clans-- and continue to cause problems even long after the conflict, leading to the current collaborative effort to hunt down and deactivate (by code or more physical methods) the few remaining Dragons' Teeth units that remain active.

From:

And the World Turned Upside Down-- the Clan Invasion and the End of the Great House System.

Luthien Free Press, 3100.

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Re: Forging the Future: Coming Home
« Reply #27 on: 16 January 2013, 12:29:47 »
Oh hell. You don't do things half way, do you?

Korzon77

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Re: Forging the Future: Coming Home
« Reply #28 on: 17 January 2013, 03:07:20 »
One thing I disliked about the Clans as written was how mind numbingly incompetent they were. When you had flag officers charging into battle screaming about "dishonorable spheroids" because said spheroids had never heard of the Clans and therefore didn't know what their customs were, or at the other end, letting the Spheroids play games iwth thier customs in extremely transparent ways, it just made their whole structure unbelievable. 

This is the descendents of the SLDF the most pragmatic and tough military in history. Not only that, but they have been preparing, supposedly for decades to one day return to the IS, and they never thought to put up some deep space listening beacons?

You know, it conjures the image of a Clan commander with a Thomas guide, driving his force around and around in circles because he's refusing to ask for directions to the nearest world. 

So this setting is the Clans done more along the line a highly trained force that has a mission knows what their mission is and are going to accomplish it.  No matter what it takes. 

Korzon77

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Re: Forging the Future: Coming Home
« Reply #29 on: 17 January 2013, 03:24:14 »
Clan Occupational groups:

In their drive towards the Inner Sphere, the Clans had taken many periphery pirate realms that had swollen with refugee pirates as the PSDF drove them out of other regions.  The Clans dealt with these pirates in a merciless fashion, and swiftly occupied their worlds. 

Over the course of 3051 they started to establish training camps for the best of the civilians, many of whom were fanatically loyal to their new masters, who tended to not include "the right to rape your women" as part of their rulership doctrine.  The Inner Sphere had abandoned them and for the former Rim Worlders, the memory of the Lyrans was bitter indeed.   The Clans brought food and medicine and better yet, a doctrine that promised a future for the children of the abandoned and savaged worlds.

And in return the Clans obtained troops and support workers. While the Clan home worlds had a population of over 15 billion, this was insignificant against the vast numbers of the Inner Sphere and to be hoenst, more than a few Clans worried about to fast of an exposure. 

So by the early 3050s the first Occupational Groups and Support Forces were seen.  Troops piloting second line, but still fearsome mechs and battlearmor designed for merely human frames, supporting the front line Clan units.  The pilots and crews of these units knew that the best might be adopted by a Clan and this drove most of them on to even greater efforts.  It would be these forces that would help the Clans and in fact bear the brunt of the titanic battles that would rage over the late 3050s and 3060s, when invasion forces that had once numbered several regiments swelled to dozens of mech regiments backed by evne more conventional regimental groups.   By the late 3050s, these groups were augmented by other converts to the Clan way of life, which also provided the Clan Council with useful intermediaries to the conquered and semi-independent Autonomous Enclaves in the Former Lyran Commonwealth. 

gladius

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Re: Forging the Future: Coming Home
« Reply #30 on: 17 January 2013, 04:43:39 »
One thing I disliked about the Clans as written was how mind numbingly incompetent they were. When you had flag officers charging into battle screaming about "dishonorable spheroids" because said spheroids had never heard of the Clans and therefore didn't know what their customs were, or at the other end, letting the Spheroids play games iwth thier customs in extremely transparent ways, it just made their whole structure unbelievable. 

This is the descendents of the SLDF the most pragmatic and tough military in history. Not only that, but they have been preparing, supposedly for decades to one day return to the IS, and they never thought to put up some deep space listening beacons?

You know, it conjures the image of a Clan commander with a Thomas guide, driving his force around and around in circles because he's refusing to ask for directions to the nearest world. 

So this setting is the Clans done more along the line a highly trained force that has a mission knows what their mission is and are going to accomplish it.  No matter what it takes.

Clans acting inteligently and rationally can be scary ... one hopes that the Spheroids arn't left holding the idiot ball, and use their own advantages (numbers, resources, fanaticism and nationalism).

Korzon77

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Re: Forging the Future: Coming Home
« Reply #31 on: 17 January 2013, 05:08:43 »
The Inner sphere does-- but be advised this is a story that ends with a radically changed world-- a'la how much the world was changed between 1933 and 1945 in our real world. Major powers go away, never to rise again.

Korzon77

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Re: Forging the Future: Coming Home
« Reply #32 on: 19 January 2013, 22:06:44 »
Timeline for “Forging the Future” the Clan War:

3045-49.

Upon the decision to Launch Operation Revival and the confirmation that Wolf’s Dragoons have “Gone Dark”, the Clans start with Strategy Trials, a series of expansive real and simulated war games to prepare for the Invasion by choosing the best leaders for the job. 

Meanwhile, the Clans start to build the strategic infrastructure needed to invade the Inner Sphere, by building logistics points in uninhabited systems, usually out of hte ecliptic of any worlds in order to reduce the chance of being discovered.  A network of jumpships is designed to allow for the high speed transit from the Clan worlds to the Inner Sphere, involving a vast amount of production.

Meanwhile, covert ships start to observe the Inner Sphere by jumping into systems, and recording all of the transmissions detected. In other cases, teh jump ship simply leaves stealthed observation satellites behind, linked to the larger networks of HPG repeaters. 

The existence of the PSDF and Comstar force some changes in the Clans’ plan.  The Original intent, to strike for Terra and expand outward is now scrapped in favor of preparing the ground first. The Federated Commonwealth is a priority target, as is the Draconic Combine. The Smaller states, it is assumed can be eliminated later, or preferably, will surrender once their hopeless position becomes known.

3049-50.

The first strikes take place against border garrisons, giving the impression of a linier sweep into the Inner Sphere.  The Clans use their higher technology, but not all of it, nor do they reveal the warships that they have accumulated.  Most attacks are on second line  units, which quickly break and withdraw. 
Both the Draconis Combine and FC move their frontline troops to the border, assuming that the attack is from a highly advanced but obviously small periphery power.  At first, while clearly outmatched by the Clan technology and general fighting skill, this tactic works.  A number of RCT’s successfully drive the Clans off their initial target, although oddly enough the Clans are never caught in enough disarry to prevent them from boarding their jumpships and leaving.

The Success leads to the decision to order a general attack in the hopes of capturing more of the high technology devices.  The speed of the counter offensive leads to many units being left on their own, and overall command and control becoming disarrayed.

It is at this point that the Clans’ true attack commences.  Massive attacks are launched, and the true Clan invasion forces, drive to support the decoy forces, striking the Inner Sphere regiments with forces that are two and three times their number. The Clan tactics are plain—take advantage of their superior mobility and smash their enemies with overwhelming local superiority.  At the same point, the bases of the Inner Sphere forces are struck and destroyed by Clan forces, leaving the retreating RCT’s no where to go.  During this time, Victor Steiner-Davion is reported missing.

3050-3053: Tidal Wave.

While the IS forces are still reeling, the Clans press the advantage.  Within the first half of 3050, nearly fifty worlds fall under the Clans, and many more are simply left on their own. In many cases, the Clans take a world, smash its military forces and then leave it with observation satellites.   Other worlds, such as Coventry and Wolcott are occupied and used as stating points for later advances as the Clans’ established forward supply points.

In 3051, Wolf’s Dragoons announce their origins and offer to help.  Their help is taken but a miasma of distrust falls over the once prestigious unit.  Comstar and the PSDF suggest that only a united front can stand up to the Children of Keresnkey, who have announced their intention to reform the Star League.   While both the FC and the Draconis Combine are eager to form such an alliance other groups are not.  The Magistracy Union is willing to provide financial and military assistance, but not direct combat troops, the Capellan Confederation, under the  increasingly delusional Romano Liao demanded that the Star League be reformed to fight the threat...with Romano at its head.   The Tauran Concordat also promised indirect aid, but would not contribute units, although Jeffrey started a massive  build up. 

By 3052, desperate work by Comstar on older Star League designs led to the first protomech designs, although the dangerous nature of the surgery mainly restricted it to tye young and even they were at grave risk. The intention was to hold the systems in reserve until they were fully tested.

However, 3052 saw the second wave of Clan assaults, this one targeted on major industrial and production nodes—including Tharkad.  The Clans permit the desperate plea for aid to get out, and infuriated by the threat to their leadership, nearly every Lyran force in range, as well as many Davion units land and battle the Clans.  This allows the Clans to destroy much of the active military force of the FC in one single bruising engagement.  Back on Terra, this changes the equation and the protomech program, as well as other programs are ordered into production.  Yvonne Steiner-Davion will be one of the first volunteers for the dangerous process, a fact that cements her mothers increasing paranoia regarding Wolf’s Dragoons.

Fortunately, while the Clans have done far better than the Inner Sphere, their own logistics network is overstretched, as much by their success as any resistance the Inner Sphere was able to put up. Furthermore, while they were defeated the near fanaticism shown by the Inner Sphere Forces on Tharkad damaged a number of frontline Clan units and the continuing battles in the Draconis Combine make it plain that the Inner Sphere has not surrendered.

Back at Terra, the CAMA is established with General Christa Williamson as supreme commander.  Although initially a military without any troops (most member states were reluctant to sign over large bodies) it has the production might of Terra, the PSDF and the Magistracy Union behind it.  In fact, the lack of large forces allows CAMA to experiment with new tactical paradigms.   The first mission is Operation Flypaper, the intent to use orbital dropped submarines, vtols and protomech troopers to tie down Clan occupation forces along the front line.   In late 3053, Yvonne becomes the first member of the Royal Family to land on Tharkad after teh invasion, as she is among the first wave of Operation Flypaper forces. 

mikecj

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Re: Forging the Future: Coming Home
« Reply #33 on: 20 January 2013, 00:12:08 »
Nice, more please?
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Korzon77

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Re: Forging the Future: Coming Home
« Reply #34 on: 20 January 2013, 05:20:51 »

3054-56: Holding the Line

Between 3054 and 3056 the stalemate continues—the Clans and Inner Sphere forces find themselves unable to socre a decisive victory. The growing number of protomech forces make securing a world harder than in the past for the Clans, and the Clans also now have targets they must defend.

However, the Inner Sphere has its own problems—while the technological designs of the CAMA and other Inner Sphere R&D departments are developing new technologies, they are still unable to match Clan tech.  In other areas, they seek to wrok around it, such as the  Chimara Semi-AI system, based on neural net mapping of a number of animals.   This occurs in tandem with projects to recover the Casper AI combat systems, but progress, on both fronts, is slow.

Finally, the clans retain warship superiority, despite the construction of new warships from the Terra and Quatre Belle yards.  These targets are very heavily defended, and so the Clans make the decision to not immediately attack them.  They do however, adopt the sub-capital weapons used by CAMA for their own assault dropships.

Most of 3054 is occupied by very heavy raids across the Inner Sphere. Since there is no effective way to interdict or track ships, both sides must make thier best guess as to where the enemy will be, and heavily garrison every potential target.  In a way, this reduces the amount of violence as many mechs and warships are left guarding targets that are not attacked.

The major point of contact remains Tharkad.  CAMA and FC reinforcements  continue to stream in, keeping the resistance alive while the Clans use the planet for training purposes, rotating newly trained troops into it long enough to be “blooded’ under controlled conditions.   The civilian population begins to suffer, although both sides work to keep the majority of the conflict away from heavily populated regions.

However, more ominously, the Capellans build up their forces, but refuse to contribute any to CAMA.  Intelligence reports indicate that Romano Liao is becoming increasingly unstable, and in fact has ordered a duplicate of the Court of the Star League built for her use.  Unfortunately the Clan war requires a continual drain of soldiers from the Liao border.

Additionally, in December, Jeffrey Calderon dies unexpectedly. There are rumors of poisoning, but nothing is proven. After his death, his moderate administration is replaced by a group of hardliners, seeking to make use of the current distractions to retake Tauran worlds lost in the Reunification War. 

Finally, while piracy is not uncontrollable as yet, the PSDF finds its forces stretched thin, even as the impact of the war leads to a number of economic dislocations as production is shifted to military arenas.  However, military production is at an alltime high.  The Clan’s (and Inner Sphere’s) reluctance use WMD’s or the tactics that made the succession wars so lethal have resulted in a growing number of military units facing each other. It is hoped, by General Christa and others, that the Clan’s individually superior soldiers will be swarmed under, but the arrival of the first Clan Occupational Groups ends that hope.  These forces, mostly recruited from periphery worlds taken (and protected) by the Clans have no love for the Inner Sphere and with a leavening of Clan officers prove equal to most Inner Sphere forces.  This allows the Clans to pull back their frontline units and refit them back up to full strength without losing ground. The arrival of other Clans, Ice Hellion and Diamond Shark among them add more forces, though the Diamond Sharks appear to be more involved on maintaining the economic structure of their conquered worlds.

3055 is well-known for two reasons.  The first is that Hohiro Kurita manages to retake Wolcott, but is injured in the process, taking him out of action until late 3056 and depriving his father of vital support.  Takashi Kurita makes the decision to move the Capital of the Draconis Combine to Wolcott, a move that annoys his son, being tremendously risky, but helps shore up the flagging morale of the Citizenry of the Combine.
The second event is the loss of one Heir and the recovery of another.  Yvonne Steiner-Davion is captured by the Ghost Bears in a cleverly executed trap.  However, Victor manages to return at the head of a regiment of soldiers, all that are left of the forces smashed by the Clans. His journey is a harrowing tale, including one case of torture at the hands of pirates before his men could rescue him.  While in public he is feted and saluted, longer term observation makes it plain to Hanse that his son is suffering from severe PTSD and despite his wishes cannot be considered  suitable for either military command or to ascend the throne should Hanse and Melissa fall. Victor is transferred to serve as the FC liason with CAMA, and his sister Katherine and younger brother Peter are officially recognized as the heirs. 


3056: The gods first raise up...

By 3056, Operation Thunder is ready.  While the Draconis Combine pledges support, the offenses on their border is secondary.  The main offense is to come from CAMA and the FC, moving in to retake Tharkad and other major targets.  Unlike the initial counterattacks, Thunder is planned around a very methodical approach, pinning and destroying Clan forces before moving on.

Unfortunately,  the Inner Sphere is still not aware of the full extend of the Clans’ fast transport networks, but even so, Thunder might have won save for treachery, treachery that ironically had nothing to do with the Clans.

The first attacks, in the waning months of 3056 are successful, and the sheer number of units produced make them greater than anything since the Ameris civil Wars.  Where planets had once been invaded by single regiments, now the skies were blotted out by mechs. The Campaign for Donegal was one example, involving nearly 40 mech regiments over the course of 3056-7. 

By February 3057, the major attack forces are in position, led by Hanse Davion on board the PSDF Inflexible, and are preparing to launch their attack on Tharkad.

The Clans had prepared for this—the losses they had suffered could be made up, so long as they were victorious. Sacrificing a number of worlds, the Clans pulled back and concentrated several massive strike forces, targeting Hesperus II—and in a work of great daring, Avalon.  The Clans’ sociologists felt certain that losing both capitals would be a tremendous blow to the FC and paralyze their military.

3057: ....whom they would destroy.

The first landings on Tharkad were conducted under the blaze of capital grade weapons as over a hundred warships, to say nothing of dropships and fighters struggled to gain orbital dominance for their ground troops. Loremaster Tseng of the Ghost Bears died in combat from orbital bombardment by the FCS Vengeance, while the first landing forces engaged the Clan troops. 

And, when the information was communicated to them by the Clan HPG network, the Clan Attack forces launched their strikes.  Sirens howled in Avalon as the first McKenna class warship jumped in. Within a few days, Avalon was a mirror Image of Tharkad and the offensive timetable for CAMA and its allies had gone rather off. 

Worse was to come.  When the first attacks occurred, it was assumed that they were from the Clans, but in truth it was the Capallens under “First Lord”  Liao and the Tauren Concordat.  Unlike the Clans, both nations were willing to use WMD’s on targets that proved to tough and within a month, more civilian’s have died on that front then have died in the entire Clan conflict to date. Both sides apparently felt that the time had come to carve off slices of the dying Davion nation, although some pundits wondered aloud if they expected the Clans to respect their gains, when they got there.

And that proved to be the deathknell for the FC.  Troops that had been pulled from “Safe” sectors to do battle with the clans learned that their families were dying even as they fought for worlds hundreds of light years away.  Several units mutinied and left, trying to get home, while others launched foolish attacks to try and drive the Clans off. Hanse, attempting to rally dispirited troops, died on Tharkad in June, and his wife would follow him in a last stand on Avalon in August.  This was only a microcosm of the entire front—worlds saw their soldiers desert or tried to hold on to the equipment while other worlds, mostly capitals, attempted to convince the provinces to stay with them. The entire FC became a confused mess of soldiers streaming back home, trying to rally at their homeworlds, or simply fighting the Clans.    The two heirs, Peter and Katherine, found themselves unable to come to an agreement on what to do . Katherine headed to Alarion founding a government in exile and summoned all loyal soldiers to defend the region.

Peter, made the decision to order all units that would follow him to head to Terra and join CAMA as subordinate, rather than allied units.  CAMA for its part, provided transport, and helped with moving men and resources including entire dismantled factories to the worlds around Terra.

And on these worlds a new movement started being talked about—the Hegemony restoration movement...

Ending: 3057


By the end of 3057, one of the most powerful governments in the history of man was no more. Where the FC had been there was now a chaotic mix of worlds, some surrendering to the Clans, some preparing to fight and some uncertain of what to do.  Many military units turned to piracy, either because they needed to, or because they hoped to profit off the chaos.  Others were heading to Terra or the Government in Exile at Alarion, or to try and defend their homes from the Capellans and the Taurans. 

Perhaps the only bit of good news was that the Clans were completely unprepared for their victory. They had planned to take maybe 50 worlds and now had hundreds and the need to set up occupational governments, re-establish order and root out guerillas, renegades and pirates made it impossible for them to even consider moving on Terra. Not only that, but more than a few Clan leaders argued that any attack would force CAMA and the other Inner Sphere forces to ignore the atrocities being waged on the borders of the former Federated Suns, which was against the way of the Clans. 

Against his best judgment, Khan Jorgensen agreed for a general suspension of offensive actions save where they were needed for immediate tactical needs.  If it was a gift, it was a bitter one.  Few In CAMA or the Draconis Combines’ strategic operations centers could find comfort in the fact that the tide of occupied systems had slowed—for it only drove home how completely they had failed to stop it.


Shadow_Wraith

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Re: Forging the Future: Coming Home
« Reply #35 on: 20 January 2013, 10:24:17 »
 :-[  Wow very nice update.  Sad to see the FS side of the FC go but nice.  Looking to see what you wil replace the FS with.

mikecj

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Re: Forging the Future: Coming Home
« Reply #36 on: 20 January 2013, 12:25:19 »
Time to glass Sian & Samantha
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"First, one brief announcement. I just want to mention, for those who have asked, that absolutely nothing what so ever happened today in sector 83x9x12. I repeat, nothing happened. Please remain calm." Susan Ivanova
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Romo Lampkin could have gotten Stefan Amaris off with a warning.

Korzon77

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Re: Forging the Future: Coming Home
« Reply #37 on: 21 January 2013, 05:29:47 »
3058-9: Recovery.

While CAMA still had abundant industrial resources, the blow to the morale of hte Inner Sphere forces could not be underestimated.  Many units in the former FC, even those who had joined CAMA tended to melt away in the face of Clan attacks.  Others simply hunkered down attempting to defend worlds from the Capellan’s and Taurans.   Takahashi was heard to bemoan the fact that never had such a great opportunity been presented to crush the Davion’s once and for all...and it had to happen when it constituted a disaster for the Combine. He, no less than any of the Combine generals could read spreadsheets after all, and if the Clans were able to gain control over the entire FC, or even a large portion of it, the other states were doomed. 

On the other hand, since it was plain that the Clans were intending to drive for Terra, the strategic directors of CAMA had some other plans.  The Clans could not simply bypass worlds within one or two jumps of earth, lest they be caught by reinforcements.  For this reason, over the course of 3058, a vast series of construction projects were initiated, creating massive fortifications designed to force the Clans to engage in frontal assaults, the one type of combat that minimized their technological advantages. 

In addition, The Magistracy and Free World League agreed to aid the remnant of the FS against the attacks by the Capellans.  Massive battles started rocking the area, but the Capallens, despite their initial success, soon found themselves bogged down as increasingly fanatical resistance, fanned by their use of WMD’s, lead to even small worlds being hard to take. The Outworld’s Alliance and PSDF contributed to CAMA, with elite OA pilots dueling with Clan raiders.

The Tauran front was distinguished by naval battles as the remains of the FSN attempted to smash the smaller Tauran navy.  Reinforcements continued to trickle in, but the Tauran’s use of WMD’s allowed them to drive forward.  More generally, the battles on the Tauran front were distinguished by a savagery not seen since the Amaris civil war with the murder and abuse of soldiers and civilians becoming increasingly common. 

Technologically, the first Chimara robotic combat units were developed.  Unlike earlier attempts at drone combat units, these designs were based on imprinted engrams of animal brains (earlier attempts had used biological brains that were transplanted, but that had proven unreliable).  Although far from the AI of science fiction, and in fact attempts to use this process on human minds did not produce AI, these “Semi-Autonomous Intelligences or SAIs were capable of excellent planning and combat skills, although some early tests indicated that some designs might suffer from a syndrome that for lack of a better word, would be called “robot paranoia.”  Further, attempts to recover the old Casper designs started to bear fruit, with plans to deploy “hunter-killer” drones and warships to disrupt the Clans’ logistics network 

Such programs showed promise for the future, but for the present, the main developments were incremental.  Manuel protomech control systems allowed a pilot to drive his unit much like a large BA or mech, at the cost of the proto’s incredible dexterity, while improvements in the mental implanting process drastically reduced the danger to the teens and young-adults who had volunteered for the neural link controlled protos. 

Meanwhile, the Hegemony Restoration Movement continued to grow, not just on Terra, but many other worlds of the former Hegemony.  Although widely varying in ideology, the movement was united in declaring that the House Lords, Comstar and the Clans had lost the right to rule the old Hegemony.  Although some worried about the movement, in the dark days of 3058, the people needed any hope they could get, and so the decision was made to ignore the movement.
 

As 3059 started up, the Clans began to increase the tempo of their offensive operations and realized that Khan Jorgensen had been right.  Now, as they came closer to Terra, it was harder to secure their flanks and many worlds were either empty, or heavily fortified.    Not only that, but while CAMA was in no shape to launch a general offensive, groups like the Eridini  Light Horse and Wolf’s Dragoons (partially rehabilitated after Victor’s reappearance and his parents death), launched deep raids on transport nodes.

Where the Clans had once taken world after world, they were now trapped in slugging matches for individual continents. Worse, the Clan training system produced the best warriors in the universe—but it did so slowly and there was no way to increase the speed.  The Clans’ sword, while still sharp, was increasingly being battered by the dull but more numerous clubs of the Inner Sphere.

The same situation was occurring in the Draconis Combine, where DCMS troops retreated, unlike their suicidal stands early in the conflict. Now, the order was to preserve their units and bleed their enemies white. 

Sidebar: Lifeline flights.

While there were far fewer worlds that required life support in the 3050s (as most that did hadn’t survived the Succession wars), there were a few.  In the vast majority of Cases, the Clans and inner Sphere forces ignored these worlds and permitted supply flights to continue.  The reason was quite simple—the 1st Succession war had proven that such worlds were hideously vulnerable to attack and could not be defended.  For that reason, both sides saw no reason to destroy worlds that would, if they won, be theirs, and if they lost, cause no extra harm. 

VhenRa

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Re: Forging the Future: Coming Home
« Reply #38 on: 21 January 2013, 14:03:38 »
I know one thing that should be hovering at the back of the Clanners minds...

"What if the Inner Sphere decides to simply send raiding forces throughout our captured territory, destroying every jumpship in turn, nuking recharge stations, using strategic devices on factories, smashing ground forces from orbit, ect ect.?"

gladius

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Re: Forging the Future: Coming Home
« Reply #39 on: 21 January 2013, 17:26:41 »
I'm more concerned about the Dark Caste ... with the bulk of the Clans warriors sent to the Sphere, their homeworlds lie open for the depredation of the bandits ...

Brother Jim

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Re: Forging the Future: Coming Home
« Reply #40 on: 21 January 2013, 18:16:36 »
TAGged.

Korzon77

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Re: Forging the Future: Coming Home
« Reply #41 on: 22 January 2013, 05:25:26 »
3060-62: Slugfest.

The two years following the resumption of the Clan offensive were some of the most devastating, in terms of military losses, since the Amaris civil war.  The continuing reluctance of all combatants to open the genie of WMD attacks on strategic targets resulted in an ability to quickly replace human and material losses and the Clans’ advances had brought the front lines in range of the industrial heartlands of Terra and other worlds.

The Capallen and Tauran fronts continued to be violent—in fact their use of WMD’s and the side effects may have saved many lives by making it plain, that just as in the 1st succession war, while WMD usage exponentially increased the damage it did not, in fact prove to be a decisive weapon.

Unfortunately, while the Tauran’s could be put on the back burner, the Capallen Confederation’s close proximity to Terra and other vital worlds made its reduction imperative, and so both the Free World’s League and the Union of Canopus and Anduin launched attacks on undefended Capallen worlds. That, combined with Romano Liao’s increasingly erratic orders essentially stopped the Capellan Confederation’s advance.

On the Clan front, things were turning into a slugfest.  The dug in firebases and forts forced the Clans to root out the defenders pillbox by pillbox, while the increasingly confident CAMA navy started to engage with Clan warships head on. Wolfpacks of the Independence class frigates, modified and upgraded versions of the Tauran Concordat class frigates teamed up with New Syrtis     model carriers to launch punishing raids behind the lines.  A smaller number of Tarawa class raider transports joined them, dropping heavy mech units onto Clan worlds. 

Here the Clans sudden advance harmed them—CAMA had fewer worlds to protect than the Clan did targets and so it was the Clans that now had to spread out their defenses forces. The more aggressive clans, most importantly Clan Smoke Jaguar started agitating for a more aggressive advance, making use of  the orbital bombardment of strategic facilities, but the other Clans, most notably Clan Ghost Bear and Wolf refused to sanction  such tactics.

Meanwhile, the first of CAMA’s, “wonder weapons” appeared on the field of battle. Some were more or less specialty weapons, such as the Sabre class submersible fighter—which had been designed to support the no-longer existing insurgencies on tharkad.  Others, such as the Chimera AI systems proved very useful, providing human units with expendable yet effective combat drones.   Although nowhere near the skill of even a normal (much less Clan) warrior, a dead Chimera drone could be replaced as soon as a new one could be uncrated. 

Sidebar: Bug runs

The Chimera drones were used in “bug runs” where a transport would make a high speed transit of a Clan world, dropping various types of drones.  The drones would receive targeting information about Clan targets and were used to harass Clan troops. While in most cases, a drone unit could be smashed, their presence, and the fact that many were ordered to hide for varying amounts of time, forced Clan leaders to detail a somewhat larger number of units than had originally been planned for rear echelon duty.  Although many Clan warriors spoke of these depraved tactics, their effectiveness could be seen in the development of specialized weapons to shut down the drones, as well as the effort expended on designing Chimara for Clan forces.

By 3061, the battlelines had stabilized somewhat.  Skye was one of the most heavily contested worlds, with just over 150 CAMA and Clan mech regiments, supported by a larger number of conventional regiments.  The Capellan front had stabilized and information spoke to an increasingly unstable Romano Liao.  The Tauran front had also stabilized, but for darker reasons—the use of WMD’s had destroyed so much of the infrastructure, on both sides, that it had become impossible to effectively support large scale operations.

The Taurians were  finally knocked out of the war (at least from an offensive point of view) when a combined CAMA and PSDF task group centered on a McKenna class battleship, along with several other capital ships managed to fight its way into the Taurus system, and after receiving no answer to its demand for a cease fire, spent the next 36 hours bombarding known industrial plans with laser fire supplemented by orbital strikes from fighters and small craft.  Although the fleet suffered heavy aerospace losses and damage to its capital ships, the damage to the military based Taurian industry was nearly total.  Although the Taurians did not surrender (or even offer to negotiate terms) CAMA and the PSDF both expected that the damage would prevent them from taking any further major actions until the Clan situation was resolved.

“Archon”  Katrina Stiener-Davion continued to claim the Entire FC, but in truth her writ was restricted to the area immediately around her provisional capital, with little industry (at least in the sense of prosecuting a major conflict).  The Clans did not launch attacks on her realm, quite possibly for the same reason CAMA didn’t finish off the Taurians. 

New Avalon however continued to be held by the Clans, and CAMA decided that the world would be the focus of their offensive. It was far enough away from other major Clan fronts that reinforcements would be more difficult and in any case, anything that pulled Clan forces away from the frontlines around Terra was a good thing.  Victor was granted the right to lead the mission, with Precentor Focht as his second in command, and by August 3062 the first major naval engagements were taking place in the New Avalon system, and by October, the first divisional groups had landed. 

This presented the Clans with a problem. Avalon had always been more of a political target, rather than a military one. For all of its symbolic importance, its industry (especially after the Clans finished removing what was valuable and destroying the rest of the military infrastructure) was negligible compared to Terra.  The rising demands for frontlines units at the same time those units were being bled led the Council, after no small amount of argument to order the evacuation of New Avalon, and by December, the last Clan units had left. 

Unbeknownst to everyone at the time, 3062 would prove to be the highwater mark of the Clan Invasion. It might not have been, but the events of last days of 3062 forever derailed the invasion.

Clan Smoke Jaguar had already been reprimanded for its overly brutal ways, but in late December, a failed Jaguar raid of Imbros III, due to an “underhanded” stratagem by the garrison led to the Jaguar warships launching a 24 hour combined conventional and nuclear bombardment.  Over 150 million citizens, the vast majority of them unaffiliated with the defense forces died in the bombardment. Rumors, never proven or disproven, spread that the Jaguar commander had ordered the bombardment to cover up his own incompetence. 

This threw the Clan council into an uproar, especially when Jaguar Khan Showers not only refused to allow his subordinate’s to be brought to justice, but proclaimed that only by teaching the Inner Sphere Surats the futility of resistance could the Founders’ dream be made a reality.

The only thing that prevented a likely challenge to the death was that the Council was being handled by HPG transmission, but it sent shockwaves through the Occupied Zone and beyond.  The Wolves immediately demanded a Trial of Annihilation against the Jaguars, while the Jade Falcons suggested a Rite of Absorption.  Khan Jorgenson, while privately furious with the Jaguar’s tried to avoid the utter chaos such a series of trials would bring down on the Clans at this most critical moment.

Perhaps, Khan Showers presumed that such dangers would insure the protection of the Ghost Bears, but on December 31st, another case or orbital fire support occurred, this one  at Alcor by a raiding Smoke Jaguar forces, which resulted in the deaths of several hundred thousand citizens.  The Warden clans were up in arms about this, and Clan Nova Cat started to withdraw from some of its commitments, amid rumors of mysterious visions.  It soon became plain that there was more than enough support in the Clan Council for a right of Absorption, if not more severe sanctions.  Before that could be decided on, the Jaguars started to pull away from their current areas, leaving the Clans in Disarray as they started to drive straight for Terra, assuming that once it was conquered, the victorious Clan would be immune from any sanction.

It was a move that was insane, in some regards, but its very insanity made it deadly—CAMA had assumed (correctly) that the Clans were proceeding in a methodical fashion and so was caught off guard when the first ships of what would soon be a very large fleet jumped into the Sol System. 

VhenRa

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Re: Forging the Future: Coming Home
« Reply #42 on: 22 January 2013, 07:57:12 »
That... should have been the point when the IS opened up their nuclear stockpiles. Specifically nuking Smoke Jaguar forces.

Atlan

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Re: Forging the Future: Coming Home
« Reply #43 on: 22 January 2013, 13:27:02 »
The entire point of all WMD treatys- including the Clan/Inner Sphere one about orbital bombardment- is that each side agrees that they'll only use WMDs if the OTHER SIDE does FIRST.

The Smoke Jaguars have broken their side of the treaty- the CAMA can nuke them without the other Clans having a leg to stand on to complain.

gladius

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Re: Forging the Future: Coming Home
« Reply #44 on: 22 January 2013, 18:26:14 »
The entire point of all WMD treatys- including the Clan/Inner Sphere one about orbital bombardment- is that each side agrees that they'll only use WMDs if the OTHER SIDE does FIRST.

The Smoke Jaguars have broken their side of the treaty- the CAMA can nuke them without the other Clans having a leg to stand on to complain.
Ah, but that's expecting the Tankers to react rationally and sensibly ...

... which is the concept for this fic. Never mind: carry on.  O0

DoctorMonkey

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Re: Forging the Future: Coming Home
« Reply #45 on: 22 January 2013, 19:10:07 »
Ah, but that's expecting the Tankers to react rationally and sensibly ...

... which is the concept for this fic. Never mind: carry on.  O0


There is fiction and then there is fiction on the fiction but even that would be pushed too far to picture a Smoke Jaguar acting rationally or like anything other than a hormonally challenged adolescent
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Korzon77

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Re: Forging the Future: Coming Home
« Reply #46 on: 22 January 2013, 21:04:52 »

There is fiction and then there is fiction on the fiction but even that would be pushed too far to picture a Smoke Jaguar acting rationally or like anything other than a hormonally challenged adolescent

To use the internet term, I've always seen the SJ's as having "drank the coolaid."  The rest of the clans, can to a greater or lesser degree, step outside of their box, but the Jaguars have, over the course of the years, managed to effectively purge themselves of any doubt.

Which means that the reaction to a little voice telling them this may be a bad idea is to delcare an immediate circle of PURGE IT WITH FIRE!  This is the reason why in this setting, the Jaguars are not long for the world.

Korzon77

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Re: Forging the Future: Coming Home
« Reply #47 on: 28 January 2013, 05:31:25 »
The Battle of Terra has also been called “The Great Confusion” or “The Great Cluster****”.  If not for the deathtoll, some of the flailing about would have been amusing.

The Jaguar’s actions had left huge swaths of Clan occupied space vulnerable, and carrier groups, independent regiments, and insurgents took little time in taking advantage of that.  Task Force 22, taking advantage of the news, launched  a strike of over 300 fighters, assault dropships and small craft bombers from the Carriers Lexington and Akagi, smashing Clan space docks at Orestes, destroying a Nightlord class battleship and two Aegis class cruisers, not to mention the yards themselves—the ships had been caught by surprise when their defending Jaguar forces had unexpectedly decamped.   Rather than return to Terra (and likely arrive too late to help), Rear Admiral Sheila Conners gathered more forces and kept driving up the chain of Clan advances, absolutely savaging a number of rear area depots and units.

Khan Jorgenson and his second in Command Urlic Kerensky worked to solve the problem, but the conflict was exacerbated by a number of other clans “following” the Smoke Jaguars. Clan Jade Falcon deployed a large number of their forces, intending to save Terra from the horror of a nuclear bombardment—or as some cynics suggested, being in position to reap the benefits of such a horror without catching the blame.

In truth, as shocking as the sudden unraveling of Clan unity was to the Inner Sphere, it wasn’t surprising to many members of the Clans. The invasion had always been based on a complex negotiation of inter-clan rivalries, ranging from high minded  philosophical differences between Wardens and Crusaders to somewhat less high minded rivalries and simple dislikes.  The Jaguar’s decision not only broke Clan Unity as far as moving towards Terra in an organized fashion, but suddenly broke open the taboo of settling old scores at precisely the wrong time. 

Meanwhile, the Nova Cats, started to move, but their actions seemed more organized, as they began to move up mobile factories and other units, while several Nova Cat leaders were seen in meetings with Comstar representatives. (ironically, by and large Comstar's network had been allowed to continue—the economic damage shutting it down would have badly damaged the economies of the Clan conquests.)

In the Sol System, the first wave of Jaguar attacks smashed through the defense cordons. The Jaguar’s did not use nuclear weapons at first, which put the CAMA defenders in a quandary—they did have nukes, but to use them would at eh very least expose the PDF sites on earth to nuclear attack. Not only that but nobody could say for certain what the Jaguar’s might do if they saw that they had no chance of invading Terra—information indicated that the Clan had literally staked its survival on being able to hold Terra and lay claim to the homeworld of man before the other Clans could take vengeance. 

For that reason, Christa took the grave risk of ordering that nuclear weapons were not to be used unless the Clan used them or started to engage in indiscriminate orbital bombardment. 

But Christa made another decision, one that in the short term exposed her to a great deal of criticism. Instead of calling all forces to defend Terra, she ordered a general assault by all forces that could, hoping to pin down Clan reinforcements, and ideally start to drive them back.  It was a reversal of the earlier battles in which piecemeal reinforcement had been smashed by the Clan armies.  But the generals of the Inner Sphere had learned and were no longer panicked by the advance of the Clans.

The first Jaguar landings occurred in China and North Africa, both centers of industry and population.  CAMA and local defense forces engaged them, while the skies were crisscrossed with the  contrails of atmospheric dogfights.  Other landings occurred in quick succession.  The first cities to be claimed by the Jaguar’s were Washington DC and Rome, but they were easy victories—CAMA forces retreated without firing a shot rather than risking the ancient buildings and archeological sites in the cities.  The Court of the Star League had no such defense—Christa had assumed that the Clan would be desperate to capture it, and so ringed it about with every unit she could lay her hands on, including some of the new “Terran People’s  Militia” forces.  The battles that started there would be known as some of the greatest conflicts in history, gaining the nickname of “the 31st Century’s Kursk”. 

In space, things got more disorganized with the arrival of the first Clan Wolf ships, which seemed more interested in blowing up Jaguar ships than they were in fighting CAMA forces, though they certainly didn’t turn down the opportunity.  A number of prototype CASPER units which had been tasked to disrupt the shipping lines of the clans were ordered into combat, causing a great deal of misery—and not just for the clans, as by the end of the conflict fully 20 percent of the units had “gone rogue” and were shooting at anything that moved.   

On the ground, the Chimera units were less likely to shoot at their makers, but most of the conflict was being borne by human troops.  The superheavy “Goliath” mechs whose development had continued despite Christa’s disdain for the nearly immobile units, proved useful as waddling pillboxes, but in a vindication of Christa’s argument were left behind by the fast moving battles, save where they did function as pillboxes—vastly expensive pillboxes.

Unfortunately, within three days of the invasion, bad news came to Christa’s mobile command post.  Both the Capellans and Taurens had redoubled their efforts, launching attacks that included nukes, evidently assuming that CAMA would be unable to retaliate and seeking to gain as much territory as possible.  The Taurans were especially willing to use strategic range weapons in order to make up for their losses in conventional forces. The Davion fragments were retaliating against the Taurens, but being driven back as world after world fell under the assault.  The last communications from New Syrtis were cut off after the capital city was struck by megaton range strategic nuclear weapons. 

Unfortunately, CAMA has no forces to send to the aid of the Suns, although the Magistracy deployed relief forces. Emma Centralla was unwilling to risk open confrontation with the Concordat until she could be certain of enough forces to protect her own worlds from the WMD wielding TDF, but even so, Canopian rescue ships managed to save millions of Davion citizens.

Some good news did occur—the Free Worlds League, although largely staying out of the military conflict with the Clans, launched an unexpected assault on the completely unprepared Capallen border, in order to “restore order.”  Some rumors also spoke of increasing tension centering on Sun Tzu Liao, although little more was known.

Two weeks after the initial attack, the Jaguar forces were starting to flag. Their reinforcements were finding it difficult to penetrate the combination of Clan and CAMA forces, most of which had agreed to focus efforts on the Jaguar’s for the nonce.  In addition, several large Jaguar convoys, including one carrying the SaKhan had been intercepted by Ghost Bear forces and absorbed or otherwise dispatched.  The Jaguar focus on the symbolic, but largely useless Unity City had squandered their power, and the destruction or capture of the Jaguar forces in orbit had allowed CAMA to regain effective air superiority. 

Of course, that depended on what the other Clans were going to do, as increasing numbers of Clan warships were appearing on the fringes of the system, including some absolutely huge battleships of unknown design.  They appeared content to wait, which many in CAMA took to mean that they were preparing to attack the exhausted Terran forces that were still locked in combat with the Jaguar remnants. 

In the middle of this, still another unpleasant surprise hit CAMA. The Hegemony Restoration Movement now demanded that Terra and the former worlds of the Hegemony be ceded to the people living there (without, in some cases, asking the current residents) and a new “Democratic and representative government” be established.  The combined this by pointing out that many of the soldiers who were part of CAMA were also part of the HRM, and so were many workers in the industry that CAMA needed to stay in the war.

Fortunately for CAMA, the Clans were in little better shape. The pictures of a Jaguar Madcat laying shattered amid the remains of the equally shattered Wailing Wall had been only part of a series of pictures that had rocked the Clans to the core. The Jaguar’s had brought violence to Terra in amounts unseen since Kerensky had come.  The Wardens argued that this proved that invading the sphere had been an error—their decisions had tainted them with the same evil that they had come to destroy.  Even many of the Crusader Clans felt that the attack had been ill-timed and would go far to prevent their peaceful occupation of Terra.

More pragmatically, argued some Clan leaders, while they could take Terra, they might not be able to keep it. The Jaguar’s attack had opened the Clans up and now enemy raiding forces were rampaging through their rear areas nearly at will. The Diamond Sharks pointed out that it would be years before they could effectively integrate the new worlds into their order, and if they exhausted their forces taking Terra, the entire occupied zone might collapse. Worse, if it collapsed, the deaths that would result would be the Clans fault, not the Inner Spheres.  In fact, that was already the case—had not the Clans’ actions lead to the Concordat’s assault on the fragmented Federated Suns?

On the other hand, it was unthinkable to open long-term negotiations with the warlords of the Inner Sphere. To do so would go against hundreds of years of Clan belief. 

It was at that point, that Urlic Kerensky received a communication from the Estranged Wolf’s Dragoons  After reading it, he asked the Clan leaders if it would be possible to negotiate with a new power, if such a power arose on Terra, unconnected to the old House Lords.  The records of the meeting  have been played in nearly every history class since then, but they show the Khan, with something of a slight smile, asking his fellow Khans if they would be willing to do  so, to in fact, work with a Restoration  movement...
 


mikecj

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Re: Forging the Future: Coming Home
« Reply #48 on: 28 January 2013, 08:55:16 »
Ouch, nice imagery of the "mech in the Wall.
There are no fish in my pond.
"First, one brief announcement. I just want to mention, for those who have asked, that absolutely nothing what so ever happened today in sector 83x9x12. I repeat, nothing happened. Please remain calm." Susan Ivanova
"Solve a man's problems with violence, help him for a day. Teach a man to solve his problems with violence, help him for a lifetime." - Belkar Bitterleaf
Romo Lampkin could have gotten Stefan Amaris off with a warning.

Korzon77

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Re: Forging the Future: Coming Home
« Reply #49 on: 15 February 2013, 02:32:19 »
"I am not changing uniforms again." Christa said. "Last time you stuck us in World War Two era uniforms and God knows what might be next."

"Of course, General." The President Pro-tem of the Union of Worlds said. 

Union of Worlds my ass  Christa thought.  They'd just finished cleaning up the last of the Jaguar's when that damned dropship had landed at Hilton Head. It included a polite note from the Ghost Bears mentioning that the Clans could not possibly leave the remnants of the old Terran Hegemony in the hands of the house lords, but they might negotiate a peace with another body.

"And surprise, surprise, there you are."  She said.

"The restoration movement was already active on Earth and many other worlds, General, including in many of your units."

"Yes."  Christa said.  And doesn't that just put me in a pretty penny.  I can't suppress them, because if I do we'll have a civil war just in time for the Clans to arrive. But on the other hand, we're exhausted.  "But we don't have a government yet-- and don't tell me about CAMA. A military government cannot serve as a civilian government, save for the very short term." 

"For now, we can simply leave those local governments in place-- if they offer allegiance to the Union."

"No." Christa said. "Last time that happened, we had a Reunification War.  You want my support for this?  Fine.  But that comes with the requirement that planetary bodies joining us come voluntarily.

"Of course."

"And I think that maybe it would be wise if you did not run for President...for appearances sake."  Christa said.  Because I'll be damned if I trust anyone who set this up to run it.

"Ah...yes."  Henry Jefferson III said, with less enthusiasm.  "I would hope that you would remain as commander of the Union forces."

"What forces?"  Christa asked. "You might have talked to me before you ddid this, because we have House forces attached to CAMA, planetary militia's, CAMA's own forces which are about 50% PSDF troops, a lot of whom may not want to live here."  She paused, "And then of course there are the Lyran and Davion exiles, who are perfectly willing to come here, but might assume that we'll try to do something to save their worlds, especially the ones that the Tauran's are busily blowing up."    She sighed, "CAMA was an adhoc organization, and if the Clan conflict is ended, the reason for CAMA's being is also ended-- and I have no idea how many of our units are going to stay."

"But we do have reinforcements..."

"Mpgh."  Christa said.  They were going to see those reinforcements right now.


***

Nova Cat Dropship, Vision.

The Khan and SaKhan were clustered at the basis of their dropship, watching as the General and the current "head" of the new government approached.

"She does not look overly impressive."

"Looks can be deceiving, Quiaff?"

"Aff."  Khan Severen Leroux  said. 

He smiled at the last meeting he'd had with IKhan Jorganson.

"Your Clan will have to be abjured, of course."  The Ghost Bear Khan said.  "Are you prepared for that?"

"Aff."

"Good. The taint of the Jaguar's makes it impossible to continue our crusade, even if the military situation made it wise. However, this restoration movement, whatever its ultimate form, provides us with an excuse that can satisfy our more militant members."

"And if they are not satisfied?"

"They will know that the Nova Cats stand with Terra. In the short term, it will allow this "Union of Worlds" time to rebuild its forces, and will act to deter any attempts to repeat the Jaguar's folly.

"And in the Long-term?"

"While I do not share your faith in visions,"  Khan Jorganson said, "I do see the logic in the ultimate plan.  The worlds the Union  is taking, and the worlds of the shattered states of the sphere, need protection, and hope...and if it comes from a Clan, well, there are many paths to Terra, and not all of them require force.  The Crusade continues, we shall just use other methods.  Represent the Clans well, my Abjured brother, and may the Founder protect you.


"I believe we shall be able to work with this General."  he said as they moved forward to greet the delegation. Especially since she seems immune to surrounding herself with so many advisers that you can hardly hear yourself think.

Inside, after the immediate pleasantries were finished, Christa got right to the meat of the conference.

"The remaining House Lords accept your proposal, and I was assured by Takashi Kurita that, quote: I can predict that all the worlds we spoke of will vote enthusiastically to join your new union: unquote." 

"That is unexpected."  Leroux said.

"It is a sign of the esteem which Takashi holds this new nation in."  The other three fell silent for a moment.

"Takashi Kurita could care less about our 'new nation'." Christa said finally. "He just knows that it nails down his flank, gets him peace and also allows him a chance to benefit economically, or did you notice all those 'most favored trading' provisions."

"True, but some truths should be spoken of very rarely, if at all."

"To speak to our own arrangements,"  Leroux said, "Are they acceptable?"

"Yes." Christa said.  "Dependents to be granted full travel rights, and your enclaves to be governed by Clan law, violations against the Clan to be handled by a dual commission."  She shrugged, "In general it works. There will be problems, but then there always are. There are some issues that may need changing however."

The two Nova Cats tensed as Christa continued. 

"The original deal was for you to help us out with the Liaos. That's no longer an issue. Sun Tzu has issued an immediate cease fire, sent by HPG about an hour ago, and has promised to provide reparations for actions taken in violation of the laws of war."

"And what of his mother?"

"She suffered a fall, went into a coma and died...about two weeks ago."  Christa's tone turned sarcastic.  "Some unofficial reports are claiming that it was a suicide, and she also tied herself to a chair, shot herself in the head, and buried a battleaxe in her back before throwing herself down said stairs.  Obviously completely accidental.  Junior kept the lid on while ensuring that most of her high level supporters caught equally accidental cases of death.  His sister is in deep mourning...at an undisclosed location without access to communications." 

"It's fairly obvious what happened."  Jefferson interjected, "Sun Tzu is fearful of what may happen now that CAMA has a breathing space and ah, such powerful new allies."

"Which brings us to the changes."  Christa said. "The Davion/Tauran front.  "We're talking about four billion dead at least, most of them from WMD's  We took out the Tauran's ship building, but you don't need a big ship if your orbital bombardment is using 50 megaton bang-bangs.  The PSDF was too stretched to risk a conflict, especially since Emma said she'd take them out herself if the risked dragging the Canopian Union into things."

"She is allied with the Concordat?"

"No.  She's worried about those aforementioned nukes."  Christa said. "We can't be certain of what they'll do, but at a minimum, before the Canopian's and most other worlds, for that matter get into this, they want an ironclad guarantee that we can protect them, and that is going to require a big fleet-- which means yours." 

"Hmmm...I can see your point."  Leroux answered. "Of course, from a political view point, our fighting the dezgra forces will help lift much resentment."

"Yes, and you can pad out our forces-- normally we could use Davion forces, but things are so screwed up there, that we'll probably have to provide them with assistance... and I can't let Davion troops get close to the Tauran worlds-- not after this, not unless we want atrocities of our own."

"Command privileges?" 

"Independent command of your forces under the over all guidance of the Joint Chiefs-- of course you'll have a seat on the Joint Chiefs, in addition to your civilian governmental representation."  Christa said. 

"What will be your intentions with the Taurans?" saKhan Lucian Carns asked.

"Them: Gone."  Christa said grimly.  "Unconditional surrender of all Tauran forces, planets and assets. After that, I intend to strip them of every dropship, jumpship and warship production line, all combat vehicles and anything more dangerous than a butter knife factory.  We'll leave tomorrows troubles to our children, but this is our problem and I intend to make certain the Bull doesn't trouble anyone else."


« Last Edit: 15 February 2013, 02:36:24 by Korzon77 »

Korzon77

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Re: Forging the Future: Coming Home
« Reply #50 on: 25 February 2013, 05:06:20 »
Tharkad in 3095

Tharkad is perhaps the most obvious example of the changes that have befallen the Inner Sphere over the last half century.   Tourists still ski along the rugged slopes and the people still go about their daily business.  If anything the growth of the various economies have led to a greater influx of tourists.  One could almost ignore the changes, but then an Elemental Patrol marches past, or a group of Cadet Clansmen being introduced to their patrons.

But nowhere is the change more obvious than at the Triad.  Clan officers and officials throng the halls once owned by the Lyran government, and the great hall no longer has two Griffin Mech’s flanking the Archon’s Throne. Rather, two battlemech sized statues of  Aleksandr and Nicholas Kerensky flank the seat of the Ikhan.  Below that are the seating for the Clans, both those that have remained in the Homeworlds (and have sent their representatives) and those who have chosen to make the journey to the Inner Sphere.

Tharkad is still a capital, but it is the capital of the Clans, a sign of their victory, and example of their determination to rework the Inner Sphere in their own image. 

Because of its importance, Tharkad is very heavily protected.  Each enclave has its own defenses of course, and they are kept in practice by regular trials, held in selected areas on the planet.  Massive ground and orbital SDS installations have been installed since the fall of the planet to the Clans, and at least two heavy battlegroups of warships, taken from all the clans, remain ready to defend the world at all times.

Tharkad’s industry continues to play a major role in Clanspace’s industrial production—as with other primary production sites, the Clans have ensured that low volume critical components are manufactured in Tharkad and sent out to other assembly sites, ensuring that an invader would be unable to immediately start producing clan grade equipment—and incidentally making it unlikely that rebels would be able to do the same. Currently, it is likely that economics play a more important role than defense however, as the Clan Economic Development Council continues to focus on bringing all the conquered worlds up to a minimal standard of living rather than spreading high tech (and overly expensive) factories to worlds that could not effectively make use of them.

While largely eliminated in the 3080s, there have been occasional outbreaks of terrorist violence.  The clans have effectively suppressed many of these, with the assistance of local forces due to popular revulsion in the aftermath of the 3081 terrorist bombing of Otisberg that left over 90,000 civilians dead. 

Currently, the governors of Tharkad are Planetary SaKhan Karin Cooper of Clan Snow Raven, and Planetary representative Wilson Rowland.  Although normally the primary authority on any planet, SaKhan Karin has to juggle the presence of many high ranking clan officials, which she does with aplomb.  Like many planetary SaKhans, one of her main duties is ensuring that the various Trials do not overly inconvenience the planetary population.


Korzon77

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Re: Forging the Future: Coming Home
« Reply #51 on: 25 February 2013, 05:18:39 »
The Clan Economic Development Council

The CEDC may be mocked by some young warriors as a place where academics and has beens go, but the Khan’s supported it from the very first occupation of a conquered world. They had records of the collapse of the Hegemony, and it was plain that the economic disorder had finished off any chance of salvaging the situation.   Worse, even the most powerful states of the Inner Sphere had vast numbers of individuals living in abject poverty.  While propaganda spoke of the fact that many of the civilian castes didn’t have the same luxuries of the Inner Sphere, the Clans could point to the fact that their people all had enough to eat, and proper medical treatment.

The CEDC started work in the Periphery, with the Chainline Isles, which were in some respects a laboratory for later work. Since then, and continuing to today, the CEDC has been focusing on developing a common standard of living for the worlds under the clans, while ensuring that the process of integrating them into larger society is handled efficiently. 
This gives the CEDC a vast amount of power, and the Khan’s work to ensure that they have a say in the organization, which includes moving the best (and most loyal) administrators into controlling slots.  In addition, the CEDC works closely with Comstar, which still handles the majority of civilian communication in the Inner Sphere, and has a major educational presence on many worlds.  The fact that many of these teachers are spies (as are many CEDC liaison officers to Comstar) is held as patently obvious. Young, and overly honorable Clansmen who find this odd, are required to watch the old Earth Classic Casablanca to gain a full understanding of the proper attitude.
The CEDC’s relationship with local Clan leaders can be tense.  Technically, the CEDC can forbid trials if they are deemed to be a danger to the local economy.  Unofficially, CEDC officers understand that forbidding a trial between some angry youngbloods may be much easier than forbidding a grudge match between highly ranked members of major clans. They learn to choose their battles wisely.
Needless to say, the CEDC’s emphasis on economic development has resulted in the Diamond Sharks working with them, as well as staffing many of their positions. Accusations that the Diamond Sharks have been using this to their advantage are met with shocked denials. 
The CEDC has been making a great deal of progress, but literally decades of work remain.  Most CEDC liaison teams are small, and many entrenched interests on local planets, to say nothing of insurgents and pirates can make this job quite...interesting. 

Korzon77

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Re: Forging the Future: Coming Home
« Reply #52 on: 05 March 2013, 04:43:46 »
Hmmm...have a map of the inner sphere circa 2095, bu thte smallest I can get the pdf is 385 K, so I'll have to find a place to link it.

Korzon77

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Re: Forging the Future: Coming Home
« Reply #53 on: 08 March 2013, 04:07:42 »
A pdf of the IS circa 3095.  Modified from the Excellent Columbus Cartography Service map.

http://happyhyena.files.wordpress.com/2013/03/3095au.pdf

Shadow_Wraith

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Re: Forging the Future: Coming Home
« Reply #54 on: 08 March 2013, 10:42:39 »
Nice map to see how your AU is at 3095.  Now looking forward to the story!

Korzon77

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Re: Forging the Future: Coming Home
« Reply #55 on: 10 March 2013, 04:41:39 »
May be a while for that-- i'm so snowed under it's not even funny-- what I might do is put out some setting info, to show how you get to 3095.

Korzon77

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Re: Forging the Future: Coming Home
« Reply #56 on: 12 March 2013, 04:14:35 »
3075


So, here we are, sitting in a hanger on the Iwo Jima waiting for the Boss to show up. Oh, right, this diary is going to be published some day, when I need to retire to my vast estate in Baja California. 

Very well, General Yvonne Steiner-Davion is preparing to brief the elite soldiers of the 23rd infantry combat team. Better, posterity?  In any case, here she comes, well, hobbling out to talk to us.  Yvonne isn’t just a general, of course, she volunteered for the proto program when one out of ten died on the table and the rest were looking at the kind of health conditions that get programs scrapped—unless you’re in the middle of a howling war.  Even with all the new meds and regenerative treatments, she has to walk with a cane if she spends more than 4 hours on her feet in a day, and well, as the Commandant of the Union of Worlds’ Marine Corps, she spends a lot more than that on her feet.

Gotta admit, I’m happy that my proto treatment involved me spending six months puking my guts out while the retrovirals helped integrate the circuitry with my body.  Of course, there’s a ten year limit on my career, but at the rate things are going, I expect the docs to fix that, and if not, then I spend another six months puking while they pull it out and enjoy the fact that us proto-drivers get full retirement after 10 years.  (So does anyone who takes the neural treatments, but hey, everyone knows who the real tough guys are.)

“Attention on Deck!” The Colonel barks out. It’s always amazing how that voice comes out of such a small frame. Colonel Danica is from the Magistracy, and she’s good, which is why she was tapped to lead the 23rd. 

“Thank you Colonel.”  The General says, “You can all sit down now.  We don’t have a great deal of time.”

Oh Crap.  That’s never a good sign. 

“First, the good news.  Operation Drought is pretty much done. We got confirmation today that the last Taurian combat dropships and their last warship have been destroyed.”  She gestures at the big screen and we’re treated to the last minutes of a...well, I suppose two Nova Cat battleships and a Union battleship vs. a Bull frigate counts as a battle in some people’s book, but it just looked sad to me.

“With that, we’ve managed to isolate the worlds of the Concordat from each other.  Most of the hold outs in their invasion corridor have either surrendered or been destroyed and the remainder have been scattered.”  Her smile flickers out as she continues. “The bad news of course is that most of those world’s won’t be contributing much to the second part of our offensive.  The Nova Cats will be conducting most relief operations and Peter has, in his capacity as leader of the Federated Suns, has ceded the Nova Cat zone to the clan.”

It’s amazing what some lunatic lobbing nukes at cities will do for your choice of allies.  Say what you want about the Clans, most of them fought as clean a war as you could. Not the Bulls. Some of the Vids out of the combat zone look like vids from the Amaris War.

“And that means before we can start the second phase, we will first of all, have to clean up some of our logistics problems, and establish bases  and links.”     She pauses, “I’m not happy about this.  We all know the Clan decision to  pause was a critical one, and I don’t want the history books saying the same about us.  Which means I don’t intend to give them any chance to catch their breath. I’ve asked for, and received permission to engage in robust raids to keep them off balance.” 

Maybe I shouldn’t have picked out my retirement complex after all.

“Since these are raids, not frontal assaults, heavy battlemech forces are not indicated.”  The General smirks and continues.  “It seems that this is once again a job for the Marines.”

“The good news is, that we are certain about the destruction of their navy and all the strike teams will have heavy escort. You shouldn’t worry about a lot of problems beyond orbit, and no, we’re not going to ask you to raid Samantha, so you don’t need to worry about heavy SDS systems.”

“And the bad news?”  That’s from Timmons.  Everyone knows about Timmons, but hey, he’s already in Explosive Ordnance Disposal so it’s not like you can put him in a worse position. 

“Part of your mission will involve helping intelligence teams gain access to some facilities, or providing a distraction for same.”  The General isn’t smiling at all now, “some of the nukes they used on New Syrtis were great big beasts, 50 megaton range. We want as much information as we can about where they were made, how many of them there are, and more importantly what we have to do to get rid of them before the invasion starts.  We especially want to make sure there are no more civilian strikes, public opinion, not just in the Suns, but the Union and a fair number of other places would probably demand we glass their homeworlds.  I’d prefer to avoid that.”

She pauses and looks at us and the unspoken communication goes home. If we screw up, we don’t just make ourselves look bad, we make the Corps look bad.  Who said “with your shield or on it” had gone out of style.

“I’ll let you get ready, but raise hell, keep them off balance, and lastly, make damned certain the Bulls know who it is that is kicking their tails up between their ears.”  She nods at the Colonel.

“Dismissed!” 

Well, I suppose I asked for it. Posterity demands a few good battle scenes in my memoirs.

Korzon77

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Re: Forging the Future: Coming Home
« Reply #57 on: 14 March 2013, 03:48:15 »
3095 Gazetteer  The Nova Cat Autonomous Zone

The Nova Cat Autonomous Zone was born out of two factors. The first was, while the Nova Cats had joined the Union of Worlds, leaving them too close to Terra was…unnerving to some.  The second was the wholesale devastation in the Taurian front. Deprived of most of their warships, the Concordat had resorted to the extensive use of various types of WMDs.  Although the Concordat was beaten back and later conquered, by the 3070s, both intersteller and local government in the region was nearly non-existent.  Gangs and warlords had cut up most of the worlds and even such formerly powerful worlds as New Syrtis were facing chaos and starvation. By 3080 the total civilian casualties in the region were in the billions, and those were just direct casualties. It is ironic, but while the Clan conflict was larger, it was far, far safe to be a civilian there than it was in the worlds of the Taurian Front.

Peter Steiner Davion, after becoming First Prince took an unprecedented step, offering the affected region to the Nova Cats in return for their aid in returning order to the region. “A leader who cannot protect his people can have no claim on their allegiance” is said to critics, but did gain an agreement from the Nova Cats that the population would be free to leave the zone if they desired.

That agreement was signed in 3075, and in the twenty years since, the Nova Cats have made vast strides in restoring the region from their capital in New Syrtis. Advanced Clan biological technology, based on the Star League technology used to make the Clan worlds habitable, has gone a long way towards cleaning up the devastation of the Concordat Invasion,   while shared effort in defeating the warlords and restoring civil society have welded the Clan and Davion populations together in a different, but more equal manner than the integration practiced by other Clans.

And yet not all is calm. In addition to occasional terrorist actions by Taurian groups, there are tensions between the Nova Cat Autonomous Zone and the Capellans, as well as a growing desire on the part of many, both Clan and Spheroid, to export the peace they have forged to the Uncontrolled Zone, an action that would certainly have severe implications for their relationship with the Suns and Union.

Korzon77

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Re: Forging the Future: Coming Home
« Reply #58 on: 06 April 2017, 00:34:20 »
3095: The Democratic Union of Filtvelt.

One of the splinter states arising from the destruction of the FC, the Democratic Union split in order to protect itself from Taurian attacks and the potential for seeing their soldiers pulled into continuing fruitless battles against the Clan juggernaut.  At the time, neither CAMA nor the remains of the FC had any ability to gainsay them, and so they achieved a De Facto independence in the 3060s. Numerous deserting local units provided Filtvelt with enough military forces to—barely, survive the tide of piracy and WMD attacks from various raiding groups.

However, with much of their infrastructure failing (the entire Union only had one functioning battlemech factory and no drop or jumpship production centers), it seemed to be only  a matter of time…
Until the Diamond Sharks arrived in late 3065, smashing the Tortogua dominions and taking them for a production and trading center.  With typical Clan efficiency, few of the pirates were left alive to contest matters.

For a few desperate weeks, Filtvelt considered the nightmare of a Clan invasion, but the invasion, when it came, involved businessmen, not battlemechs.  The Diamond Sharks saw a realm that was in disarray and needed help, and yet was a potentially very lucrative investment opportunity.  From 3066 on, Diamond Shark investments helped rebuild factories and cities, while their forces assisted in hunting down pirates and building up the Union’s military.  The weakened Federated Suns were in no position to disagree, having already been forced to cede the worlds of the Clan Nova Cat Autonomous Zone, and the newly established Hegemony saw the Democratic Union as highly preferable to the chaos of the Uncontrolled zone.

3095:

Today, the Democratic Union is a prosperous power, albeit one that is more or less focused on its own defense, as opposed to expanding its influence.  It’s close ties with the Diamond Sharks have seen Flitvelt products exported across the Inner Sphere and beyond, while a powerful, but primarily defensive military has largely eliminated the scourge of Taurian raids and piracy alike. It’s size and economic power has resulted in the Union having a seat on the United Nations security council, along with the other major powers, although the Union tends to abstain on most votes that do not directly concern its interests. 

Politics:
The Democratic Union’s government is anti-nobility, with many of the world’s blaming the power of the nobility for the Inner Sphere’s losses— after all, both CAMA and the Clans were not dominated by noble houses, and they did very well out of it. The Union is governed by a bicameral legislature, with one house having a representative from every world and a lower house that is weighted by population. A president serves for 6 years and may only have two consecutive terms (the total number of terms are not limited, so long as no more than two terms are held consecutively).

Relations:
The Democratic Union has good relations with the Diamond Sharks, Federated Suns, Woodbine Union, and the Outworlds Alliance, and cordial relations with the Draconis Combine.  Most other nations are treated cordially but distantly.
The two problem’s for the Union is the uncontrolled zone and the Taurian occupation zone. Both regions are the source of criminal smuggling and raids, with a large number of immigrants attempting to enter the Union. Furthermore, long-running hostility for ethnic Taurians, dating from teh use of WMD’s against Davion targets, including several Union Worlds has resulted in on and off again conflicts, including serious riots on Agliana in 3085 which forced the temporary  declaration of martial law.

marauder648

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Re: Forging the Future: Coming Home
« Reply #59 on: 06 April 2017, 04:19:48 »
Blimey, this is really good, great stuff Korzon!
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Zureal

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Re: Forging the Future: Coming Home
« Reply #60 on: 06 April 2017, 23:47:01 »
Wow... just wow, what a story and damn the cappies and cows to mess things up just so damn much. So quick question, what happened to Victor????

Korzon77

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Re: Forging the Future: Coming Home
« Reply #61 on: 19 April 2017, 04:31:44 »
LAMS and Quadvees were often seen as “jacks of all trades, masters of none” and were seen as footnotes to the history of warfare.
But by the 3080s, the PSDF has enthusiastically adopted both designs for a very simple reason:

The PSDF is largely a police force, not a regular military.  And as a police force, they ahve to deal with the problem of having a half dozen pirate units drop at widely separated places on a world, trying for smash and grab operations.

The problem isn’t killing the pirates— even second line militia units can do that, but predicting where the pirates will land and getting the needed forces there, especially as teh population of near and far periphery worlds continues to go up.

Dividing a company of battlemechs among several possible targets merely means that the  pirates can choose to land where they have local superiority, and even a regiment of mechs, if they are 300 miles away, might as well not exist for all the impact they’ll have on the fight.

Thus, the PSDF enjoys using LAMS—they can be anywhere on a world in 90 minutes or less, can threaten ships in orbit, and if a LAM is not equal to a similarly sized mech or ASF, the well trained pilots of the PSDF, coupled with the generally poor condition of most pirate mechs, makes most fights lopsided in favor of the PSDF—to say nothing of the speed of the LAMs allowing for the defenders to claim local superiority, dropping 12 LAMS on the head of a single pirate lance, before going on to repeat the process at every other landing point.  Finally, as technologically complex systems, even if the pirates should capture a LAM, they usually can’t keep it running. 

Quadvees, especially wheeled Quadvees, have the advantage of not tearing up city roads, as well as being able to move faster.  Less expensive than LAMS, most Quadvees are found in more heavily industrialized worlds, with the kind of road nets that make having the option for wheels an advantage.

Finally, the PSDF also makes use of LAMS and Quadvees for disaster relief and medical emergency support.  Usually, at least one out of every four LAMS will have integral disaster relief and medical gear, allowing it to quickly deploy and assist emergency workers, while even base models can land and use their hands to help move debris or cut fire breaks.  For a newly settled world, the fact that a LAM can be at the scene in an hour or less is a great comfort to many inhabitants, and while all LAMS are still part of the PSDF, there has been increasing thought given to producing a pure “civilian” model, which would give up all of its weapons for various types of disaster relief equipment.

DoctorMonkey

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Re: Forging the Future: Coming Home
« Reply #62 on: 19 April 2017, 09:59:13 »
What an excellent in-universe rationale for both LAMs and QuadVees - bravo!
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Korzon77

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Re: Forging the Future: Coming Home
« Reply #63 on: 25 April 2017, 06:14:03 »
The Periphery

A vast number of people fled from the Inner Sphere to the periphery, as early as the mid 3030s, where the actions of the PSDF and Comstar resulted in the general suppression of piracy. That was especially the case as improved production of jumpships led to a partial end to the prohibition on destroying jumpshiops, enabling PSDF forces to immobilize pirates.

Today, both the near and far periphery have seen increased development, with PSDF approved “colony packages” taking advantage of centuries of knowledge to establish effective systems and doctrines to colonies worlds.  The PSDF designed “colony support package” is large and expensive, filling up nearly 350,000 tons of cargo space of prefabbed power stations, initial homes, construction equipment and “multi-fac” key tools factory systems, but it can, barring catastrophe, provide the seed around which a growing colony can be established, while Comstars subsidy’s for small HPG stations help ensure that the colonies that have been founded by bright-eyed pioneers are less likely to get lost— unless they want them to be lost, of course. 

The numbers speak for themselves— since the 3030s, nearly a thousand worlds and space-based colonies have been founded, ranging from the small religious order (population 300) that landed on Hope, to over 20 million people who sought a new home away from the nuclear tainted New Syrtis on Kayland’s Home.

The most important point to the growth of the Periphery is the 3075 Kyoto Treaty, where all major powers agreed to not attempt to expand their reach into currently independent periphery lands, ceding the right of law enforcement and patrol to the PSDF and allied forces.  The underlying warning was that this treaty would only hold true so long as the old scourges of piracy did not once again arise to trouble the Inner Sphere.

Since then, the PSDF and Comstar have followed a “secret” policy that is largely openly known— the goal is to support states that are big enough to be secure, while discouraging the growth of states that are large enough to think about attacking other groups. By and large, the ideal size is whatever provides a polity with access to resources, security, and room for natural growth, but in practice, the largest states have been about ten to 20 worlds strong.

Attempts to get bigger quickly run into issues, ranging from less favorable trade terms to, (for those nations that are thinking about expanding militarily) courtesy visits from PSDF fleet units. Nothing draws a line better than a CVBG, backed up by a division of marines.

Unfortunately, for all that large scale violence isn’t in the offing, plenty of smaller pirate bands run about, ranging from Taurian “resistance” forces to groups hoping to go conquistador on less fortunate worlds. The light and medium cutters of the PSDF are kept busy providing everything from disaster relief to training programs for local militias (while also ensuring those local militias are not a cover for more expansionist goals).

Meanwhile, Exploration Command continues charting worlds far beyond the Inner Sphere.  Secretly, the PSDF is not certain that there will never be a repeat of the cataclysmic succession wars, and so, by expanding mankind far enough way that no conceivable war could consume him all,they ensure that while conflict may never cease, it will not be apocalyptic.

Sidebar: Balkanized worlds.
Many worlds have become balkanized— having more than one state on them. Less common than it is in the Inner Sphere, this often proves to be a headache for PSDF peacekeepers, especially if the populations have some previous reason to dislike each other.  The issue is only made worse by the fact that those worlds that are most likely to be balkanized are the worlds that are most desirable.

Terraforming Command

The great achievements of the Star League are in the past, and the horrible fates of many terraformed worlds are still very much a warning. The PSDF Terraforming Command, with assistance from Comstar, the Hegemony, and the Clans does not focus on bringing life to Venus style worlds, or bluntly, any world that will need continual effort to remain habitable. One merely has to visit New Dallas or Venus herself to see that is a bad idea. Rather, the command focuses on “edge case” worlds, creating ecosystems that are stable, even if not idea.  In the few decades since it has been established, no truly uninhabitable world has been made habitable, but every member of Terraforming Command understands that their missions are not measured in years, but decades and centuries.

Shadow_Wraith

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Re: Forging the Future: Coming Home
« Reply #64 on: 25 April 2017, 08:36:49 »
Nice update,

 

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