Launching Your Planetary Invasion | Orbital Bombardment, Dropships, & The Escalation Ladder

Ойын-сауық

Do planetary invasions have a place within interstellar war? Can armies be expected to size control of entire worlds? Does orbital bombardment render such operations entirely unnecessary? On this episode of Incoming, the Templin Institute dares to answer these questions.
00:00 | Introduction
04:28 | Orbital Bombardment | Justifying Planetary Invasions
05:55 | War of the Admirals | Justifying Planetary Invasions
09:32 | Disadvantages of Orbital Bombardment | Justifying Planetary Invasions
14:43 | The Escalation Ladder | Justifying Planetary Invasions
22:23 | Horizontal Escalation | Justifying Planetary Invasions
24:06 | Scale of a Interstellar Armies | Justifying Planetary Invasions
26:04 | Morality of Orbital Bombardment | Justifying Planetary Invasions
27:14 | Planetary Assault | Types of Planetary Invasion
29:12 | Planetary Raid | Types of Planetary Invasion
30:18 | Planetary Withdrawal | Types of Planetary Invasion
31:15 | Planetary Demonstration | Types of Planetary Invasion
32:52 | Crisis Response | Types of Planetary Invasion
34:20 | Phases of a Planetary Invasion
39:37 | Individual Drop Pods | Dropship Types
42:54 | Heavy Drop Pods | Dropship Types
44:32 | Light Dropship | Dropship Types
46:18 | Medium Dropship | Dropship Types
47:15 | Heavy Dropship | Dropship Types
48:04 | Light Gunship | Dropship Types
49:14 | Medium Gunship | Dropship Types
50:02 | Heavy Gunship | Dropship Types
51:00 | Troop Transports | Dropship Types
52:13 | Conclusion
The Templin Institute. Investigating alternate worlds.
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Featuring Artwork By:
Jannis Mayr | www.artstation.com/joblyn | / jannis.mayr.concept
Sebastien Hue | www.artstation.com/sebastienhue | www.shue-digital.com
Daniel Graffenberger | www.artstation.com/talros
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Background music "Building New Horizons" by Chris Haigh. "The People" by Kyle Preston, "Marching" by Swan Productions. Used under license from PremiumBeat.com
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Пікірлер: 3 200

  • @TemplinInstitute
    @TemplinInstitute2 жыл бұрын

    *Come on you apes! Do you want to pledge forever?! **www.patreon.com/templininstitute*

  • @hellacoorinna9995

    @hellacoorinna9995

    2 жыл бұрын

    "HA HA ORBITAL BOMBARDM--" *Surface-To-Orbit weapon go boom, byebye expensive warship*

  • @hellacoorinna9995

    @hellacoorinna9995

    2 жыл бұрын

    Also, good luck holding the planet from orbit. It's like living in the attic whilst rats run amock and all you have is a bunch of WP grenades.

  • @hellacoorinna9995

    @hellacoorinna9995

    2 жыл бұрын

    Also, if the enemy knows that they have only orbital bombardment to look foward to, they might well see no point in surrender. And desperate people can do desperate things. Also, even despite that, it's no fun being king of a wasteland.

  • @jesseberg3271

    @jesseberg3271

    2 жыл бұрын

    Next, can you cover boarding action (including sweeping disabled ships and protecting prize crews), occupying space stations and orbital infrastructure, and especially combat in micro gravity/zero-g?

  • @Plastikdoom

    @Plastikdoom

    2 жыл бұрын

    Nice Marine quote, perfect guys to hit planetary beaches and open up beach heads. Guaranteed we are just waiting for that epic day, to drop from space on a hostile target. So far, Amy thoughts I had on what you were saying, you got to shortly after you said, said thought provoking thing. Soo…why aren’t you also trying to convince us on the merits of ladders? They are damn handy, coming from a guy that use to use them a lot, I mean they are a pain in the ass, even though so useful….you should definitely do a vid on the merits of ladders, just saying, I’d watch it, and you know go over the history of em, they do involve a lot with warfare, especially early stuff when we still sucked at big wars, like world wars, and had piddly cannon, and garbage arquebuses. Definitely were used in a strategic way, to take castles and later forts.

  • @catinabasket8589
    @catinabasket85892 жыл бұрын

    Because of this I was able to successfully pull off a planetary invasion with minimal casualties. Thank you so much!

  • @BIL-ul8en

    @BIL-ul8en

    2 жыл бұрын

    OH commander C.I.A.B i will get my revenge for that bombardment on my planet!Just you wait because im watching it to °)

  • @tylersoto7465

    @tylersoto7465

    2 жыл бұрын

    I have a trade federation type empire like from star wars on my Stellaris game and it's fun

  • @svijj_

    @svijj_

    Жыл бұрын

    Lol imagine some alien general or strategist from an advanced alien civilization watching a video made by primitive hairless apes on planetary invasion lol

  • @Raptorus64

    @Raptorus64

    Жыл бұрын

    Minimal casualties on which side 🤨

  • @Mahlak_Mriuani_Anatman

    @Mahlak_Mriuani_Anatman

    Жыл бұрын

    @@svijj_ lol

  • @cheeseburgermovies
    @cheeseburgermovies2 жыл бұрын

    This is why Halo still does interstellar war really well. The Covenant only invaded planets that had relics they wanted. Otherwise, they just sat in orbit and glassed the planet.

  • @rhymenoceros3303

    @rhymenoceros3303

    2 жыл бұрын

    @UC2Tx01niEuzR2VMVwOIsVGg they didn’t really care about resources when the goal of their was the extinction of humanity.

  • @whatusay4980

    @whatusay4980

    2 жыл бұрын

    I mean it makes sense. Covenant main goal was eradication of humanity and collecting Forerunner relics. Once the orbital battle is won unless the world has something of interest just bomb it from space.

  • @randomusernameCallin

    @randomusernameCallin

    2 жыл бұрын

    Star Wars have shields that stops that.

  • @Sollapoke

    @Sollapoke

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@randomusernameCallin what do you mean? When has a shield stopped an orbital bombardment in star wars?

  • @Rylus571

    @Rylus571

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@Sollapoke the battle of hoth

  • @starmada105
    @starmada1052 жыл бұрын

    Your discussion on Orbital Bombardment is one of the reason I love Halo so much, because they go down the checklist of reasons why not to bombard. Do you require the planets resources? No. Do you have to worry about military consequences? No. Do you have to worry about Diplomatic consequences? No. The Covenant only deployed ground troops when there was something on the planet they wanted. Otherwise they just glassed it.

  • @svenneumann2816

    @svenneumann2816

    Жыл бұрын

    The covenant also had ideological reasons for orbital bombardment.

  • @WhatIsThatThingDoing

    @WhatIsThatThingDoing

    Жыл бұрын

    Or to obtain religiously significant forerunner artefacts.

  • @Fvv3

    @Fvv3

    Жыл бұрын

    @@WhatIsThatThingDoing goes under diplomatic consequences and planetary resources

  • @premiumprism144

    @premiumprism144

    Жыл бұрын

    Ah yes The Shadow of Intent... Rtas's solution for Wiping out Flood to Retrieve a Message from a Human kind AI for ending the infestation... Literally Glassed Half a Continent

  • @premiumprism144

    @premiumprism144

    Жыл бұрын

    Is everyone OK if and when Rtas Glasses a part of Africa to contain the flood? I'm on board

  • @rockyblacksmith
    @rockyblacksmith Жыл бұрын

    I find that the "escalation ladder" metaphor works even better if the order is turned upside down: Peacetime at the top, annihilation at the bottom. It illustrates the danger of what happens when some steps are missing, and how easy it is to slip into escalation vs. the effort of deescalation.

  • @Tank50us

    @Tank50us

    Жыл бұрын

    given the DEFCON levels go from 5 (peacetime) to 1 (Thermo-nuclear war), I have to agree

  • @AVR7771
    @AVR77712 жыл бұрын

    Damn, first ships, then tanks, now orbital bombardment? This guy is going to be the reason an Interstellar empire conquers us

  • @hanzzel6086

    @hanzzel6086

    2 жыл бұрын

    Or we conquer an interstellar empire. I give it 25/25 odds of either one. Other 50 go to us wiping ourselves out before the other two can happen.

  • @claytonthegrubkiller6430

    @claytonthegrubkiller6430

    2 жыл бұрын

    The Stellaris RP is going too far

  • @comentnine1574

    @comentnine1574

    2 жыл бұрын

    All we need now is the infantry, Air Force, high command and maybe more exotic units like pionics, mechs or whatever and we’re good.

  • @eknowles402

    @eknowles402

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@hanzzel6086 at the rate that we're going I'm banking for more than 50 that we will wipe ourselves out

  • @willtanker7684

    @willtanker7684

    2 жыл бұрын

    The Templin Institute WILL be the interstellar Empire that conquers us

  • @niko_aetherious
    @niko_aetherious2 жыл бұрын

    Spacedock: Planetary invasions are stupid! Just blockade and bomb the planet into submission. The Templin Institute: ...and I took that personally.

  • @fieldmarshalbaltimore1329

    @fieldmarshalbaltimore1329

    2 жыл бұрын

    Right, I forgot what YT cannel I heard that from. I disagreed with him heavily.

  • @FrostWolfPack

    @FrostWolfPack

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@JeanLucCaptain And it turned near decade near two slug fest.

  • @dbzfanexwarbrady

    @dbzfanexwarbrady

    2 жыл бұрын

    Spacedock is a fanatical purifyer Templin is a filthy Free Haven

  • @iliketrains0pwned

    @iliketrains0pwned

    2 жыл бұрын

    Oh, so that's why they kept using The Expanse for examples...

  • @Amoth_oth_ras_shash

    @Amoth_oth_ras_shash

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@fieldmarshalbaltimore1329 i think a lot of people noted in the comment thread for that one ,that sure....if all you sought was the short term genocide of what ever species or faction you where arbitary at war with... yes. but a lot of people pointed out various reasons one might want to invade a planet...from reasons of dogma ,culture , to the 'garden' state of it being the commodity sought to simple reasons of resources , sure if its one giant megapolis breding hive bunker fortress maby..but if its only sparly populated or an industrial center , capturing it and putting things to..your.. use instead might be a valid tactical reason. still was fun to listen to the reasoning.

  • @BallMuncher555
    @BallMuncher555 Жыл бұрын

    Covenant vs brazil would be a decisive victory for Brazil. The covenant decided to go to Brazil, and now they’re stuck in Brazil. They cannot leave and therefore have lost.

  • @Joshua_N-A

    @Joshua_N-A

    Жыл бұрын

    Double jumping Brazillians are Elite's worst nightmare.

  • @awddfg

    @awddfg

    Жыл бұрын

    the brazilians will be stuck with the jackal snipers though

  • @juniorchief5989

    @juniorchief5989

    Жыл бұрын

    Funny enough there are former covenant species living in Rio.

  • @jaredhigham869

    @jaredhigham869

    11 ай бұрын

    Gundams, the only people to succesfully escape Brazil.

  • @TY-PO

    @TY-PO

    11 ай бұрын

    @@awddfgThe Jackals become part of the Brazilian wildlife🗿

  • @michaeledmunds7056
    @michaeledmunds7056 Жыл бұрын

    For reference: excessive use of exterminatus is one of the few things that can get an inquisitor reliably excommunicated.

  • @chazaqiel2319
    @chazaqiel23192 жыл бұрын

    Man, imagine having to launch a planetary invasion of an ocean world. Full-sized battleships and aircraft carriers being deployed from orbit... Majestic

  • @Cotcan

    @Cotcan

    2 жыл бұрын

    There was a series of Star Wars: Clone Wars episodes about that. Both the Republic and Separatists both deployed water suited infantry/droids and vehicles to help secure victory.

  • @nizarb.arsantaka2740

    @nizarb.arsantaka2740

    2 жыл бұрын

    It would definitely be a sight to see

  • @EnoEshk

    @EnoEshk

    2 жыл бұрын

    If we're talking about advanced civilizations, then they could easily do much better than full size, and in invading an ocean world, they might very well prioritize massive submarines instead. Which might just end up looking like a bomb dropping from the sky, before engaging a thruster or some kind of descent mechanism to keep from killing everyone on impact with the surface of the water. Regardless the thing could be massive, possibly on the scale of kilometers if they don't intend to return it to orbit in one piece, since there's really no building limit in space other than that of resources and function.

  • @gesus6613

    @gesus6613

    2 жыл бұрын

    Deploying navel ships would be pointless. Space ships in orbit could preform all there functions from space.

  • @petersmythe6462

    @petersmythe6462

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@gesus6613 Not necessarily. 1. Spaceships can't really hit naval ships without slowing down their weapon reentry due to plasma blackout. You need to decelerate to low hypersonic speeds to guide a weapon to target. 2. Naval ships CAN hit spaceships, especially anything in low orbit. 3. Any projectile weapon at sensible muzzle velocity or delta-V will have to overfly huge amounts of territory for several minutes before impacting its target. A naval ship can receive plenty of warning and a submarine may even have sufficient time to dive before the weapon impacts. 4. From high or elliptical orbit, while the spaceship is safer and has more operational freedom, it's attacks are arguably even more telegraphed and ASATs can be deployed by the planetary defenders against incoming missiles. 5. Aircraft are highly mobile but can't be targeted with anti-ground or anti-space weaponry. The threat posed by an F-15 with an ASAT is probably sufficient that you would at minimum want some kind of air defenses near your operations. Historically, the defense against aircraft has involved air superiority fighters, which need somewhere to land, refuel and take off again, as integrating SSTO capability into a fighter would probably get it killed if it ever saw combat. This necessitates the construction, seizure, or landing of such places on the ground or in the sea.

  • @vel0xraperio
    @vel0xraperio2 жыл бұрын

    "This is a goddamn dangerous ladder and it's very easy to fall up" is a brilliant metaphor.

  • @caad5258

    @caad5258

    2 жыл бұрын

    The problem is we might start at the top of the ladder by default, ie; the Dark Forest solution to the Fermi Paradox. The hypothesis is that the Galaxy is silent of alien life because any alien civilisation that reveals itself will be nuked by silent alien civilisations.

  • @VelociraptorsOfSkyrim

    @VelociraptorsOfSkyrim

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@caad5258 Well, that's usually not a problem in sci-fi so really isn't relevant to the topic at hand.

  • @lawrencesmeaton6930

    @lawrencesmeaton6930

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@caad5258 You should read the Three Body Problem trilogy, it combines Dark Forrest Theory and intergalactic invasion fleets quite well on a hard sci fi writing

  • @caad5258

    @caad5258

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@lawrencesmeaton6930 I have yes.

  • @NODnuke45

    @NODnuke45

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@caad5258 The probability of that goes down the farther into the future we go though, because we have already been shooting signals into space revealing ourselves like crazy pretty much since the discovery of radio waves, and we're still here, for now.

  • @heartlessmushroom
    @heartlessmushroom Жыл бұрын

    The fact that EVEN The trigger-happy Imperium of Man would consider Orbital Bombardment a last resort option is terrifying food for thought.

  • @supe4701

    @supe4701

    Жыл бұрын

    Chances are, the main reason why orbital bombardement isn't so widely used is simply because it would ruin the marketability of warhammer 40k for GW

  • @warbrain1053

    @warbrain1053

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@supe4701indeed, imagine bombing chaos forces and bvr warfare in warhammer 40k.most of the factions are ded very fast

  • @lucidiabautista2085

    @lucidiabautista2085

    Жыл бұрын

    While on an individual level the Imperium is trigger-happy, a recurring theme in a lot of the fiction is how slow to act and how much redundancy of command there is in the Adeptus Terra due to internal distrust and memories of large scale rebellion.

  • @tarot3078

    @tarot3078

    10 ай бұрын

    There is an entire departement in the Inquistion, the Ordo Excorium, whose entire job is to analyse the various usages of Exterminatus to judge wether or not it was necessary. If they find a case that they judge to have been unnecessary they will then have the person who ordered it executed.

  • @dr.insanity9087

    @dr.insanity9087

    9 ай бұрын

    Many of the resources you would want from a planet risk being destroyed by orbital bombardment.

  • @JonatasAdoM
    @JonatasAdoM2 жыл бұрын

    I can imagine the institute taking note when someone a long time ago in a land far far away said "The Ballista. The weapon to end all wars!"

  • @tbotalpha8133

    @tbotalpha8133

    Жыл бұрын

    "Ah, the pointy rock. The weapon to end all wars!" "What's a war?" "Dunno."

  • @Jasmixd

    @Jasmixd

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@tbotalpha8133 "What's a weapon?"

  • @jujuplayboy
    @jujuplayboy2 жыл бұрын

    "In the practical art of war, the best thing of all is to take the enemy's country whole and intact; to shatter and destroy it is not so good." -- Sun Tzu, The Art of War (Ch. III "Attack By Stratagem", §1). If it works for countries, it surely works for planets.

  • @fieldmarshalbaltimore1329

    @fieldmarshalbaltimore1329

    2 жыл бұрын

    It's amazing how the Art of War applies to almost everything, even sci-fi

  • @jujuplayboy

    @jujuplayboy

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@fieldmarshalbaltimore1329 Amazing indeed. I think it's because Sun Tzu based his book on researches he made during his lifetime and tried to keep situations he's describing as broadly as possible (sometimes it's almost "war epistemology" or Polemology).

  • @exudeku

    @exudeku

    2 жыл бұрын

    Its actually common sense depends on your war goal. Stopping an expansionist empire? Capture its planets for resources Full-on Genocidal mode? Exterminatus Helping a rebellion or ideology war? Capture it whole and make a puppet gov Lower their morale? Bomb civilians Lower their output? Strategic bombardment

  • @DOSFS

    @DOSFS

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@fieldmarshalbaltimore1329 Art of War is pretty much the most basic of war so, in term of human war, is (mostly) timeless

  • @mattstorm360

    @mattstorm360

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@fieldmarshalbaltimore1329 Well it better seeing as Sun Tzu invented fighting!

  • @bubbasbigblast8563
    @bubbasbigblast85632 жыл бұрын

    One of the other things we can learn from World War 2 is that having a fleet of ships in a location known to the enemy for any significant length of time would be INCREDIBLY dangerous in any situation where the enemy has ships that can respond: one of the hardest things to do to even have a battle at all (space or sea,) is to find the other ships, but if you know where your enemy is (like, say, in orbit,) and they don't know where you are, you can launch a massive first strike against their fleet and gain a solid upper-hand. If the planet has its own defenses as well, the attacking fleet would also be immediately flanked, and usually with no means of retreat. As such, many planetary assaults would need to move *fast*, so the most valuable ships involved can retreat to a safer location, and the ships you would leave behind to support the invasion would likely be weaker and expendable, and thus unlikely to be able to support each army beyond wherever the planetary defenders might have a dead spot in their defenses.

  • @1967sluggy

    @1967sluggy

    2 жыл бұрын

    Also worth noting IMO, that when it comes to a interstellar civilisation's planet vs a fleet, the planet almost always has the upper hand. They have the material resources of the entire planet to throw at the fleet, they have bigger and more numerous reactors with which to power better shields, and they have the ability to construct bunkers and so on. Unless the planet in question is severely underdeveloped, the fleet manages to annihilate much of the planet in a matter of hours, or the fleet has absurdly powerful weapons that are unavailable to the planet, a planet will ultimately win the exchange, ignoring morale. Though, even if you do include morale, that's still likely to tip in the planet's favour IMO: the civilians are trying to defend their homes from invasion. When they see New New York has been obliterated by the fleet in orbit, its likely to make them go "do I really want the people who obliterated New New York to be my rulers?". Meanwhile, if the crew of the fleet see that the space battleship USS Iowa has just been blown to bits, they're likely to say "do I really want to suffocate or be burnt to death, in order to take this planet?". Up the chain from them, you can't imagine many admirals being happy to see one of their fleets take heavy losses in order to destroy a planet that might not even be particularly strategically useful.

  • @Ditidos

    @Ditidos

    2 жыл бұрын

    Finding spaceships is actually very easy. Since they radiate heat one would be able to see the position of absolutely everyone all the time. If you wanted to have a battle, you would just need to catch up to the other spaceship before it moves away from you until one of the two doesn't have enough inertial mass or fuel to continue moving around (at that point, said side has lost the battle too, as it probably will be stranded there infinetly).

  • @Yingyanglord1

    @Yingyanglord1

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@1967sluggy It does depend as well , if you can denie via raids , power and food to the population the population may force them to surrender again though factoring int hey are some form of democracy, even if they dont cede it does push the planet closer towards defeat without a full scale assualt

  • @TheWizel

    @TheWizel

    2 жыл бұрын

    Planetary bombardment is going to be phase 2 of the planetary invasion. Phase 1 is the orbital battle. When you win you bomb all orbital and anti-drop defences. Blow up military emplacements that won't ruin civilian/industrial infrastructure. Then you drop and need to disarm the remaining defenders with orbital support replacing modern air strikes

  • @freedomloverusa3030

    @freedomloverusa3030

    2 жыл бұрын

    You can move in the ships, disembark the troops, and retire the ships, leaving in place highly automated, space fortresses, etc, but the best is to kill the enemy Navy first.

  • @Elliandr
    @Elliandr2 жыл бұрын

    My favorite dropship example was "Project Meteor" from Gundam Wing, in which space colonies, wishing to declare independence from the United Earth Federation, secretly developed an advanced type of mobile suit using a metallic alloy that could only be produced in zero gravity. They plant the trajectories alongside meteor showers so that the units could safely make landfall without being shot out of the sky. Then, once on the earth, the pilots would hide in plain sight during the day and take out key military targets at night. The overall objective was to diminish the Earth's capacity to exercise military control over the colonies, while at the same time obfuscating which colonies which actually involved in the attack against the Earth. Aside from the fact that this was a giant robot anime, I thought that the entire premise was extremely realistic.

  • @SephirothRyu

    @SephirothRyu

    2 жыл бұрын

    ITS A GUNDAM! **explodes**

  • @Sorain1

    @Sorain1

    2 жыл бұрын

    It's a brilliant example of a revised plan which is more sane than the original. Since the original Operation Meteor was 'destabilize a colony so it will drop onto the Earth, while this prospect causes chaos on Earth, use the Gundams to hit key targets so that when the colony hits, no coherent government/military response can happen, then land forces to pick up the pieces/occupy the Earth.' which, while potentially effective, is pretty damn insane in terms of collateral damage. (Of course, they didn't care about owning the Earth, just the Earth not being able to control them so it still meets their objective.) Edit: It's also worth mentioning that the original Operation Meteor wouldn't necessarily achieve the political objective the colonies wanted. It could easily have been counter productive. Meanwhile, targeted strikes in secret against the OZ membership inside the Alliance Military was a much more viable way to get the job done. It didn't end up working out, but that's in large part do to a counter intelligence coup by Oz turning their targeting onto the _exact_ wrong targets. The operation's execution was quite well done for the time it lasted at least.

  • @snatchadams69

    @snatchadams69

    Жыл бұрын

    All who set eyes on those robots weren't allowed to live to tell, those were their orders....

  • @imstupid880

    @imstupid880

    Жыл бұрын

    Turn A was also pretty good about being more about the war than the robots. The moon people also did a similar thing with using mobile suits as dropships for child scouts who would blend into society and grow up while feeding the Lunarians info.

  • @Heeroyui752

    @Heeroyui752

    Жыл бұрын

    Gundam Wing is top

  • @FormerBunsenBurner
    @FormerBunsenBurner Жыл бұрын

    That opening with the speech to the soldiers about to depart for Normandy with all the scenes of the beach landings will never get old

  • @mill2712
    @mill27122 жыл бұрын

    17:32 All points on the escalation ladder - Unrestricted use of WMDs - Unrestricted orbital bombardment - Limited use of orbital bombardment, WMDs - Mass use of conventional forces against military/economic targets - Mass use of precision strikes against military/economic targets - Grounded use of precision strikes against military/economic targets - Grounded use of precision strikes against military targets - Assembly and transfer of WMDs - Complete mobilization of all forces - Precautionary WMD alert - Complete infliction of damage on immaterial targets - Limited infliction of damage on immaterial targets - Military blockade - Reinforce key military units and stockpiles - Partial mobilization of military forces - Unconventional convert offense campaign in core territories - Unconventional overt offense campaign in outlying territories - Unconventional convert retaliation - Selective mobilization of military forces - Military signaling, test exercises - Pre-crisis maneuvering, gestures, diplomacy

  • @UnreasonableOpinions

    @UnreasonableOpinions

    2 жыл бұрын

    I see "gestures" and now I can't stop thinking of Pakistan 's delegate in the US flipping off India's delegate across the UN council chambers.

  • @alinmeleandra3175

    @alinmeleandra3175

    2 жыл бұрын

    the war in Ukraine is now at: "- Mass use of conventional forces against military/economic targets "

  • @causeeffect1487
    @causeeffect14872 жыл бұрын

    Battle-tech during the age of war shows how effective orbital bombardment is,but also how ineffective it is when you actually want a planet and not a burning and radioactive waste land.

  • @cp1cupcake

    @cp1cupcake

    2 жыл бұрын

    In Starship Troopers (the book) the navy has weapons which can blow planets in half. They aren't allowed to use them because that would mean the habitable planet humans could spread to in the future is gone. There is also a third alien race in the series which is, more or less, neutral because they need a different environment to live in (both humans and bugs want the same type of worlds).

  • @igncom1

    @igncom1

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@cp1cupcake I had a similar situation in a 4x game, Space Empires 4, where I encountered a friendly alien race that could only inhabit gas giants. Meaning we had essentially no real reason to wage war on one another.... yet anyway. So instead we colonies each others space and I became imminently paranoid of all these potential footholds in every system. Scary, but safe!

  • @everyonethinksyoureadeathm5773

    @everyonethinksyoureadeathm5773

    2 жыл бұрын

    Pretty much after the Tanetenvel incident, it pretty much forced all nations to sign a convention treaty that outlawed thr use of WMDs indiscriminate action. (Unless your Capellians picking a fight with Space West Virgina...then you're going to end up with lots of dead Capellians and one planet to show for using nukes.) However that did make war more of a sport until the rise of the Battlemech. Then in the first two succession wars... pretty much all the noble houses regressed to what would amount 2000 Era of technology with smoldering ruins of the 30th century of advance tech....that yes it is possible to bomb humanity back to the stoneage.

  • @ALLMINDmercenarysupportsystem

    @ALLMINDmercenarysupportsystem

    2 жыл бұрын

    Good thing that Halo's Covenant didn't care about preserving human planets, just killing humans and occasionally taking some Forerunner relics before the glassing.

  • @sleepingpiranha8879
    @sleepingpiranha88792 жыл бұрын

    "We don't need swords! The bow and arrow has rendered them obsolete." Me in every medeval game.

  • @skepabbas9400

    @skepabbas9400

    10 ай бұрын

    “Bows and arrows are obsolete to my plate armour”

  • @betanovaneo4249

    @betanovaneo4249

    9 ай бұрын

    ​@@skepabbas9400 "plate armor are obsolete against my heavy mace"

  • @vincediscombe7360

    @vincediscombe7360

    8 ай бұрын

    @@betanovaneo4249 "Your heavy mace is obsolete to my horse archer"

  • @ethanstine426

    @ethanstine426

    4 ай бұрын

    ⁠@@vincediscombe7360Your horse is obsolete to my engine.

  • @yourlocalfurrylandsknechtowo

    @yourlocalfurrylandsknechtowo

    3 ай бұрын

    All of the comments above me are obsolete when it comes to the versatile usage of all of them

  • @vincediscombe7360
    @vincediscombe73602 жыл бұрын

    I love the calling out of the more impetuous among 40k fans, and how accurately they'd be regarded in-universe

  • @TFZ.

    @TFZ.

    Жыл бұрын

    Indeed. Such disregard shows a falling to the ruinous powers that cannot be tolerated.

  • @RokkitGrrl

    @RokkitGrrl

    Жыл бұрын

    Sadly, in the case of dealing with Tyranids, it proved to be easier to declare Exterminatus on a world where the Hive Fleet was already committed to the digestion of that world, depriving it of nutrients and the ability to recycle what it sent down.

  • @cardinalvarsen5781

    @cardinalvarsen5781

    11 ай бұрын

    Quicly reminder that the inquisitor that made that doctrine is considered a rouge inquisitor

  • @tungleson7066

    @tungleson7066

    9 ай бұрын

    ​@@cardinalvarsen5781that doesn't mean he is not right. He is just unlucky. Were it the ICOG, they will be more than happy to go through with his tactic if it mean denying their enemy an advantage, no matter how slight.

  • @farseeraradrel4808

    @farseeraradrel4808

    8 ай бұрын

    The main problem with the Exterminatus of Tyranid infested worlds is that you can't (or rarely can) destroy a planet once the Hive-Fleet is there, because you would have to break through hundreds of bio-ships to reach the orbit. It's what happens in the Tyranid ending of Dawn of War II : the Exterminatus fleet is forced to retreat because it can't oppose the returning Hive-Fleet. Kryptman's plan was to bombard worlds before the Tyranids would get to them, which is why he was ultimately excommunicate. He destroyed Imperial assets and lives before anyone (but himself) was sure they were really in-danger.

  • @alexdivision4320
    @alexdivision43202 жыл бұрын

    I love the Maginot Worlds in stellaris. A whole planet gets converted into a sprawling defensive platform with all districts dedicated to planetary defense and basically every citizen exists solely to defend the planet. And, if somehow the planet falls, the planet acts as an antimatter bomb and annihilates the whole solar system

  • @74wf

    @74wf

    2 жыл бұрын

    So that's what Maginot worlds do

  • @74wf

    @74wf

    2 жыл бұрын

    I did not put that apostrophe there Apostrophe was placed on worlds edited 2 days before fireworks spam day

  • @achillesrodriguezxx3958

    @achillesrodriguezxx3958

    2 жыл бұрын

    So basically it's a Cadia???

  • @ZCid47

    @ZCid47

    2 жыл бұрын

    While mods should not be counted the reality is that those word are a pain in a playthrough. The core of the empire accessible by only one hyper-line and at the end is a 30K star base that debuff your fleet follow by a planet full of fortress, a planet shield and a ftl inhibitor that you need to take to progress in the war

  • @alexdivision4320

    @alexdivision4320

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@ZCid47 Gigaenginnering is basically a core part of the game from how my friends and I play lol

  • @ramesunan5491
    @ramesunan54912 жыл бұрын

    Another problem with orbital bombardment is that you're assuming that the enemy will never challenge your space superiority, and that your fleet will be able to stay over the enemy planet forever. You should never assume that your opponent is passive.

  • @robertwilson973

    @robertwilson973

    2 жыл бұрын

    Big problem here is that you are assuming that you would have to keep your fleet in orbit. If you hit all the space ports from space, not only have you crippled your enemies ability to strike back quickly but you cause enough environmental damage that the enemy will be trying to stay alive, or will have to simply leave the base/planet in question. Your fleet moves on to the next target knowing they have dealt a serious blow to the enemy. Your enemy doesn't have to be passive, you just need to be quick and accurate in your attacks.

  • @NODnuke45

    @NODnuke45

    2 жыл бұрын

    Relying entirely on orbital bombardment also fails to account for the possibility of an enemy that simply refuses to surrender, despite being in a hopeless situation. Or the possibility of an enemy building weapons that can destroy anything in orbit from the planets surface, even as they are being blockaded.

  • @dominiklehn2866

    @dominiklehn2866

    2 жыл бұрын

    That's what I was thinking. First, getting all your slow, heavy guns on the only angle an enemy WONT be coming from is a bad idea, second, why should the ground force surrender when help is on its way? Why give up if you know you just need to hold out a little longer?

  • @yjlom

    @yjlom

    2 жыл бұрын

    surface weaponry could afford to be much stronger than spaceship mounted one because you don't have to worry about weight or recoil and if they have bunkers say 2 km deep in the crust you definitely aren't destroying it from orbit plus they have an entire planet to turn into ammo... so yeah a defenceless planet is a stupid idea

  • @dominiklehn2866

    @dominiklehn2866

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@yjlom yeah, fortifications are always a pain for the attackers. It's been that way since the dawn of war itself. "You can't build fortifications in space" sure if you say so, but you can fortify a planet and then you aren't getting through that. And if it's reach is far enough you have to attack that fort if you want to move through the system without being just shelled into submission

  • @dankvk6363
    @dankvk63632 жыл бұрын

    I'd like to point out the Siege of Vraks, where orbital bombardment would have destroyed the armories the Imperium needed to capture. Orbital bombardment is not a possible solution when irreplaceable resources cover the target zone.

  • @nicholasbrown668

    @nicholasbrown668

    Жыл бұрын

    Those armories were buried deep beneath the bedrock, orbital bombardment would have done nothing Either way the Imperial Navy couldn't even get close enough to the Vraks citadel to bombard it, when ships did get within range of the Orbital Laser Silos, they were instantly attacked and damaged

  • @berkowk

    @berkowk

    8 ай бұрын

    In the end it was cheaper to exterminate planet than fighting for arsenal.

  • @dragonace119

    @dragonace119

    6 ай бұрын

    @@berkowk Mainly due to Demons, Heretic Space marines from the beginning of the Heresey, and a full traitor Titan Legion appearing.

  • @batuhangocer6642

    @batuhangocer6642

    4 ай бұрын

    @@dragonace119 and the armories being depleted

  • @michaelwilson6358
    @michaelwilson6358 Жыл бұрын

    This is a superb video, not just because of the content, but also to drill in the fact that reality is almost infinitely, fractally complex. Simple answers are always wrong and even complex answers are necessarily incomplete, yet we can each handle only so much complexity. The universe is full of patterns - intelligent thought would be impossible if it wasn't - but they interact in such infinite combinations that every historical event is a special case. All we can do is strive to understand as much as we can, prioritise our mental effort and maintain awareness of just how much we don't know and are forced to gloss over. A great aspect of the Templin Institute is how they strive endlessly for classification, systemisation and pattern recognition - whether they're dealing with mundane pieces of military materiel or whole pantheons of mind-breaking horrors - yet also acknowledge the limits of that approach. It really feels like the kind of applied scholarship you'd get out RAND or a similar high-end think-tank; briefings prepared for heads of states by experts who understand both the frustrating imprecision and the vital necessity of their work.

  • @camerongunn7906
    @camerongunn79062 жыл бұрын

    As we in the US Army are fond of saying, "Normandy. The greatest amphibious assault in the history of the world... And not one Marine in sight."

  • @USSEnterprise6126

    @USSEnterprise6126

    2 жыл бұрын

    Thare was a larger landing a year later on Okinawa D day was the largest in history when it happened but Okinawa was larger Also thare were marines on d day just look it up

  • @davidstreet5160

    @davidstreet5160

    2 жыл бұрын

    As a Marine myself "ahem" 🖕

  • @etaylor495

    @etaylor495

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@USSEnterprise6126 Op Husky was bigger than them both

  • @jeffbrewer1580

    @jeffbrewer1580

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@USSEnterprise6126 there were a few pulled from the Pacific to help plan the assault but overwhelmingly army. Fun fact though many of the landing craft were operated by us coast guard

  • @USSEnterprise6126

    @USSEnterprise6126

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@jeffbrewer1580 I know I have studied ww2 sense I was 10

  • @Mitchz95
    @Mitchz952 жыл бұрын

    An example of a planetary (well, starbase) demonstration: In Star Trek: Deep Space Nine "By Inferno's Light", the Dominion made a lot of noise about retaking DS9 from Starfleet and the Bajorans, even faking warp signatures to suggest an inbound fleet, prompting Starfleet, the Klingons, and even the Romulans to deploy a huge task force to defend the station. Turns out the real plan was to trigger a supernova in the Bajoran sun, which would have destroyed the entire fleet, along with the station and Bajor.

  • @swanky_yuropean7514

    @swanky_yuropean7514

    2 жыл бұрын

    It is strange that in ST they never use WMD's directly against other ships always against planets or stars.

  • @Mitchz95

    @Mitchz95

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@swanky_yuropean7514 I mean, a photon torpedo is already a WMD. Even in the 2150s, a single torpedo could wipe out a city with ease at maximum yield. Presumably the 23rd and 24th century torpedoes are even more powerful, and deflector shields have improved to compensate.

  • @piotrd.4850

    @piotrd.4850

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@swanky_yuropean7514 But... but they have. Routinely.

  • @piotrd.4850

    @piotrd.4850

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@Mitchz95 Voyager, "Omega Directive" - special torpedo to "blow up a small moon".

  • @Macro105

    @Macro105

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@swanky_yuropean7514 Also the Federation was kinda morally above that, like covert Ops and espionage to bring Romulus into the war seemed wrong at evil at least portrayed by Sisko. The nearest widely deployed WMD was probably and advanced ship type like Sovereign Class

  • @aronaskengren5608
    @aronaskengren56082 жыл бұрын

    I feel the sudden urge to start up Stellaris, glass enemy worlds and roach in fortress worlds.

  • @MiguelAbd
    @MiguelAbd2 жыл бұрын

    It's interesting to see how to escalation ladder of violence depicted at 17:24 can be easily applied to the current conflict in Ukraine. It really is easy to climb it, and hard to come back down.

  • @Flint_Inferno

    @Flint_Inferno

    2 жыл бұрын

    I was thinking of that when I first heard about the situation

  • @captain61games49

    @captain61games49

    2 жыл бұрын

    No fly zone they say

  • @alexlauer7571

    @alexlauer7571

    2 жыл бұрын

    It's also intresting to see how he mentioned that some groups can't climb the ladder as successfully as others, and what were seeing from Russia is that they thought they could climb the ladder to way higher way quicker than Ukraine could,/would, and boy were they wrong.

  • @sabotabby3372

    @sabotabby3372

    Жыл бұрын

    eh~ not quite to me it seems more that they aren't willing to escalate it vertically or horizontally, whereas NATO is practically tripping over itself to do so if it doesn't get reined in to be clear, I'm not implying any kind of moral supremacy, just that both sides have come to wildly diverging risk assesments and the world is a good deal more miserable for it

  • @ImperativeGames

    @ImperativeGames

    Жыл бұрын

    @@sabotabby3372 The escalation ladder didn't delved deep into horizontal aspect of it. It's one thing to have a war in puppet state or exploited colony and other thing entirely - ethnic conflict in former part of your country, targeting your nafionality. - For Russia this conflict is already very high on escalation ladder and western leaders don't understand that at all.

  • @thenoobdestroyer100
    @thenoobdestroyer1002 жыл бұрын

    The siege of Terra in 40K is proof that purely orbital attacks aren’t enough if the enemy has shields, orbital attacks are extremely useful strategically eg localised lance attacks etc the issue is with bombarding a world to dust you lose its resources and at the extreme ends you lose a planet strategically

  • @ThePowerthatbeMe

    @ThePowerthatbeMe

    2 жыл бұрын

    Drop site massacre

  • @tyrannicfool2503

    @tyrannicfool2503

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@ThePowerthatbeMe To be fair wasn’t that an ambush by presumably friendly forces?

  • @Keemperor40K

    @Keemperor40K

    2 жыл бұрын

    40K is the poster child for why planetary invasions work and generally have the logistics to make it work. Certainly everyone always says exterminatus all the time, but that is always a last resort, even by the exterminatus trigger happy inquisition.

  • @mitchell3593

    @mitchell3593

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@tyrannicfool2503 yep, the astartes went in expecting light to medium resistance from known forces and instead were attacked by traitors, and it's actually a great example of why planatery bombardments don't always work, the traitors deployed a virus that ate all organic matter, and the astartes still survived and forced the traitors to deploy ground troops to elimanate them

  • @DatAsuna

    @DatAsuna

    2 жыл бұрын

    I think the video makes the best comparison up front: It's not a new suggestion, and despite what bomber harris and others insisted, they already had their proof that bombing alone couldn't force a surrender in the form of the blitz. If it didn't work in London, only hubris would lead them to believe it would work everywhere that wasn't London.

  • @hang_kentang6709
    @hang_kentang67092 жыл бұрын

    In Battletech, warships became obsolete when the the great houses finally realized that using indiscriminate orbital bombardment as a standard procedure against an entrenched opponent might be counterproductive to their objective of actually taking over a planet. you dont steal a car by setting it on fire.

  • @Ishlacorrin

    @Ishlacorrin

    2 жыл бұрын

    This, collateral damage ruins your prize for taking the planet in the first place.

  • @marley7868

    @marley7868

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@Ishlacorrin and just makes your people think your a psycho

  • @Ishlacorrin

    @Ishlacorrin

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@marley7868 Yeah turns public opinion against you something shocking as well. Great way to make MORE enemies though, if that is a part of your plan.

  • @marley7868

    @marley7868

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@Ishlacorrin I'm fairly certain the only people who get away with that stunt in battletech is the taurians and that's cause they nuke there own planets out of spite and have been wmd'ed so hard I think it's grandfathered in it's okay against them just kinda stupid

  • @clomiancalcifer

    @clomiancalcifer

    2 жыл бұрын

    Well, interstellar invasion is....a laughable idea to begin with. Why land on a world that is actively hostile to you, when there are literally millions of other worlds with the same ores, minerals and resources all around you uncontested. Especially when regardless of your intents the biosphere is likely to be incompatible with your biology due to divergent evolution and ecology... and no 'slave labor' is not an acceptable answer, nor is 'industry infrastructure etc'. All of that is more easily acquired through negotiation, subterfuge, and mechanical automation....especially for a civilization that makes travelling across light years as trivial as going to Hawaii for a vacation. If you're looking for 'home 2.0' have the tech to bend space and time, don't give a shit about the inhabitants.....why bother with a military invasion. Glass the planet from orbit, fix it to your standards in post production. Mine resources from uninhabited rocks strewn about the universe. IF you have ethical compunctions about casual genocide of sapient life, you look somewhere else, where the moral 'umbrage' won't be so high for your biocide...it's not like the universe isn't literally pregnant with planets....and moons and other such....conveniences.

  • @Battleship009
    @Battleship0092 жыл бұрын

    I would also like to add that there's two types of orbital bombardment. Strategic and Tactical.

  • @ryanmaris1917
    @ryanmaris1917 Жыл бұрын

    This of us who actually read 40k lore would know that exterminatus was a last ditch effort, it was often viewed as defeat.

  • @notoriouswhitemoth
    @notoriouswhitemoth2 жыл бұрын

    'Orbital bombardment renders invasion obsolete' is an argument that's rooted in the idea that collateral damage doesn't matter and a sledgehammer is the tool for every job. I'm reminded of this little saying from the 19th century, when machine guns were the weapon to make all other weapons obsolete: "whatever happens we have got the Maxim gun and they have not." That lasted about 25 years.

  • @imperialamerican8209

    @imperialamerican8209

    2 жыл бұрын

    In universes with near infinite habitable planets, collateral damage doesn’t really matter.

  • @snickims9717

    @snickims9717

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@imperialamerican8209 Habitable planets does not translate to inhabited planets. Won't matter if there are 100s of liveable worlds in a war if your enemy has 3 worlds with Industry on them then they are all that matter.

  • @notoriouswhitemoth

    @notoriouswhitemoth

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@imperialamerican8209 That exact way of thinking took Russia out of World War 1. Unlimited resources don't mean unlimited access to those resources.

  • @imperialamerican8209

    @imperialamerican8209

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@notoriouswhitemoth did Russia have intergalactic space ships capable of glassing planets? If you can get resources from planets that don’t house your enemy then just glass your enemy and move on.

  • @notoriouswhitemoth

    @notoriouswhitemoth

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@imperialamerican8209 they had trains, artillery, and chemical weapons, which were the World War 1 equivalents. As wars get faster, they also get bigger. Again, "whatever happens we have got the Maxim gun and they have not" lasted about 25 years. In the 1880's, people thought the machine gun would render all previous military technologies obsolete, but by 1915 it was cannons - which had been around for centuries - that soldiers were having nightmares about.

  • @geofff.3343
    @geofff.33432 жыл бұрын

    Extermanatus is the tool of last resort, however, it is often the first proposed solution to a planet-wide issue. But, as anyone who has played Space Marine (2011) can see, it's often shot down quite rapidly. They weren't even willing to use heavy capital-ship class weaponry on the planet. The options are whittled to one advance SQUAD of ultramarines, and their whole job was simply to secure one manufactory while a proper fleet response got underway. That's what makes Inquisitor Kryptman get excommunicated from the Inquisition (right or wrong is still hotly debated), his unabashed use of exterminatus as a firebreak was seen as heinous by imperium of man standards. Let that sink in.

  • @X3105i

    @X3105i

    2 жыл бұрын

    Not to mention it was to slow down the advance of the Nids like they weren't anywhere near the systems atleast you know evacuate the damn people

  • @UnreasonableOpinions

    @UnreasonableOpinions

    2 жыл бұрын

    More specifically, Kryptmann's actions were horrifying because not only was his use of exterminatus at an unprecedented scale, it was also used against planets that were perfectly fine at the time - and worse, carried out so fast that almost none of the world's personnel, resources, and relics could be taken off. Exterminatus when a world is effectively lost makes sense; you lose the world for thousands of years or forever, but you had already lost it and get to deny it to the enemy. Exterminatus on a world that is perfectly intact and has done nothing wrong is a huge line to step over, let alone on this scale.

  • @AdmriaVanNova

    @AdmriaVanNova

    2 жыл бұрын

    Xenos Invasion In Progress Designation: Forge World Priority Assets: Warlord Class Titan Manufacturing Strategic Value: Absolute Recommended Course Of Action? Orbital Stike? Negative. Estimated Reduction In Manufacturing Output Unacceptable. Exterminatus? Negative, Strategic Value Absolute. But... Negative, Strategic Value ABSOLUTE!

  • @pll3827

    @pll3827

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@UnreasonableOpinions This also became more troublesome once Chaos started inciting exterminatus for a variety of their plots. Being overly exterminatus button pushing may indicate corruption, as well as zeal. This is part of the plot of both Dawn of War 1 and 2 games.

  • @NODnuke45

    @NODnuke45

    2 жыл бұрын

    Let's not forget that W40K is somewhat a parody of itself, and that by the moral standards of almost any other reality, the fact alone of someone being so quick to nonchalantly suggest exterminating an entire planet could get them court-martialed.

  • @bootlegga69
    @bootlegga692 жыл бұрын

    Gordon R. Dickson's novel 'Dorsai' actually looks at this in detail. In that universe, it is well established that invading a planet is impossible, yet by the end of it the hero proves that maxim completely wrong. Excellent video - subscribed!

  • @demonthegamer3624

    @demonthegamer3624

    Жыл бұрын

    So basically most of the people there thinks pulling off an invasion at that scale would be impossible, but they were proven wrong by a single person, am i correct?

  • @gnaskar
    @gnaskar2 жыл бұрын

    Here's the thing: There is no advantage to the high ground in space in most sci-fi settings. If you have the tech to bombard a planet with lasers, then ground based laser cannons can also bombard you. And ground based installations can install thicker armor, stronger shields, bigger power plants, etc, for a lot less cost than a starship can, so the ground forces are going to outgun you. Same is true for railguns/rod from the gods style weapons. the extra 10km/s or so the gravity well gives you are simply insignificant compared to the bigger arrays you can build on a planet. Any weapon you can mount of a ship can be used for cheaper to a planet. Any defensive system you have is going to be used on planets, and at a larger scale. Attackers are going to stay out of weapons range, only darting in for brief fire runs when they think they can catch a vulnerable target, facing flak and fighter assaults whenever they do. Think the battle of Britain during WW2. However, this also applies to planetary invasions. Two similar sized powers with similar tech simply cannot manage to take each other's planets. Simply put, the attacker has to transport his army, and the defenders don't. That means the defenders can field more and heavier units, on top of which they are already fortified with stockpiled supplies. On top of that, the attackers have to expect heavy losses during landing operations, and whatever support they can get from orbital artillery is nothing compared to the firepower at the local's disposal. Which means that aggressors are likely limited to either technologically advanced civilizations picking on low tech ones, or massive empires going up against single world nations.

  • @UNSCPILOT

    @UNSCPILOT

    2 жыл бұрын

    Ironically Lightspeed lag is a spacecraft's only saving grace, by doing frequent maneuvers while keeping at extreme range they are less likely to get hit with retaliation strikes

  • @tbotalpha8133

    @tbotalpha8133

    2 жыл бұрын

    I was gonna argue with you, but goddamnit, I think you're right. Less about the defenders' ground-forces being superior (because the invaders could have their own supply lines, bringing in their own heavies), and more about just how impenetrable the combo of planetside shields and anti-orbital guns would be. I genuinely can't think of any way round such a defensive arrangement. You're suggesting that planets would effectively become gigantic 3D battleships, and I can't see how any fleet of lesser ships could possibly hope to overcome such a vessel. Well, other than expending so much time, manpower and materiel that conquering the planet just wouldn't be worth it. In such a setting, I could foresee planets becoming *less* well-defended over time, not more. Because first, fleets of warships would gradually be downsized, as it became obvious to all the nations involved that attempting to invade each other's planets (and thereby end wars) would just lead to an intractable stalemate, WW1-style. Followed by the planets themselves dismantling their defences, because there would be less to defend against. With everyone being well-aware that, should war loom, every planet will rapidly start fortifying again.

  • @andytol1976

    @andytol1976

    2 жыл бұрын

    Attackers can use mass drivers. i.e. large asteroids propelled by exhaust from ships engines, or attaching engines to the asteroids themselves. You don't need many, 2 or 3, and can launch them from massive distances with precise accuracy. A 25km across asteroid of mostly iron and nickel moving at high speed, would just turn into the mother of all shotgun shells when targeted with defense systems. 2 or 3 of those and nothing bigger than a mouse would be alive on the surface.

  • @gnaskar

    @gnaskar

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@andytol1976 the locals aren't going to shatter a mass driver, they're going disable the engine and redirect it. It doesn't take much of a push for it to miss the planet all together. Nor are most of the planetary defenses going to be on the surface. As we're clearly assuming the defenders can't effortlessly vaporize the incoming rock, we have to assume that being a kilometer or so below ground is a cheap and effective form of armor. But, yeah, if you aren't trying to capture the world and are willing to commit genocide, the equation changes. At that point you have access to several cheap and effective superweapons that are almost impossible to defeat. But that isn't a planetary invasion, so it's not what we're talking about.

  • @andytol1976

    @andytol1976

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@gnaskar Unfortunately; if it's conflict with an alien species, genocide may end up the only option unless some kind of plot device like a universal translator is created. There are so many different ways to communicate though, that common ground would be almost impossible. Human on human I agree with you though; genocide isn't the goal, just the most common threat at that point in history. It would take lots of work to make other worlds habitable for us, would be a waste to start over. And mass drivers don't really need an engine. Super large warships with the capability to travel interstellar space within human lifespans (way faster than light), would produce more than enough energy to get a really big rock moving so fast its momentum wouldn't notice attempts at a redirect. Overkill: a 100m across iron/nickel asteroid moving at 1/10th C would have enough kinetic energy to probably smash the planet to pierogi sized lumps. Could do those by the hundreds with Enterprise D for example. Attaching the engines would be from crazy far away for strategic launches, and the engine only needs to get your mass up to lethal speed.

  • @exaggeratedswaggerofablackteen
    @exaggeratedswaggerofablackteen2 жыл бұрын

    Cool, might learn how I could have beaten the Rebels faster on Hoth.

  • @permafrost8322

    @permafrost8322

    2 жыл бұрын

    😔

  • @jeshuasamuel6537

    @jeshuasamuel6537

    2 жыл бұрын

    Too late my lord... To late

  • @unitedstatesofamerica4987

    @unitedstatesofamerica4987

    2 жыл бұрын

    Maybe not using a walker that would work better as an artillery piece? Just saying Lord Vader,just saying...

  • @the23rdradiotower41

    @the23rdradiotower41

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@unitedstatesofamerica4987 I’m not with him lord vader

  • @manticorephoenix

    @manticorephoenix

    2 жыл бұрын

    Frag officers like Ozzel before they can do too much damage

  • @justanobadi6655
    @justanobadi66552 жыл бұрын

    "Sometimes nuking an enemy city makes as much sense as spanking a baby with an axe" -Sergeant Zim, Starship Troopers

  • @sgtSkirata
    @sgtSkirata Жыл бұрын

    For an aspiring author, videos like this are a godsend. Thanks for the breakdown. We are a long way away from an event like this occurring, but this explanation's focus on precedents brings believability to the concept.

  • @Dunkster74
    @Dunkster74 Жыл бұрын

    slight correction at ~ 44:00 : most astartes drop pods have an integrated automated sentry gun in addition to the astartes payload it carries. these are used to clear the area in addition to the explosive release of the pod doors in order to give the astartes within a bit of room to maneuver in the case of a hot battlefield drop as well as to give supporting fire during initial ground operations.

  • @InsolentCrow
    @InsolentCrow2 жыл бұрын

    A massive fleet in orbit cannot occupy a city, a bombardment of hypersonic projectiles cannot capture a mine intact and ready to use, and a giant death laser isn't going to help you retake your own territory from an enemy power. Only personnel on the ground can do that.

  • @freedomloverusa3030

    @freedomloverusa3030

    2 жыл бұрын

    Exactly, everything and everyone exists to support the Infantry.

  • @s0ulshot

    @s0ulshot

    2 жыл бұрын

    Lol, pathogens and chemical weapons exist.

  • @tntproductions1996

    @tntproductions1996

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@s0ulshot And if the enemy has chemical suits, proper vaccines, and advanced medical equipment, chemical and bioweapons are rendered ineffective. :P

  • @StarSage66

    @StarSage66

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@tntproductions1996 I'll do you one better. If the enemy just hides underground for a few days chemical and bioweapons are rendered ineffective. Chemical weapons can't crack open a bunker or neutralize shields. Also I think its reasonable to assume most factions aren't hellbent on exterminating the civilian populace (40k being a whole other discussion).

  • @alonelyperson6031

    @alonelyperson6031

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@StarSage66 And even then 40K doesn't do that either.

  • @MonkeyJedi99
    @MonkeyJedi992 жыл бұрын

    The most important factor of a planetary invasion, or ANY exertion of force, is to know beforehand what your goal is. Do you want to own all the territory? Do you want to wreck the other side's stuff? Do you want to kill or kidnap the opposing leadership? Do you want to rescue someone? Do you want to simply prove that you CAN do something, so other future enemies think twice about confronting you? So many options.

  • @Sorain1

    @Sorain1

    2 жыл бұрын

    There's a really good reason why the old series 'Battleplan' had 'Clarity of Objective' as the first requirement for all but one battleplan. (That one being Naval Engagement, where 'Preservation of Forces' took over because of just how valuable ships are.)

  • @michaeledmunds7056

    @michaeledmunds7056

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Sorain1 "You won the battle, but lost a super carrier, so you're fired."

  • @IncredibleMD
    @IncredibleMD2 жыл бұрын

    I feel as if the Acclamator-class was closer in role to an amphibious assault ship used by Marine Expeditionary Units than a troop transport.

  • @ferguskeating8698
    @ferguskeating86982 жыл бұрын

    I hope the Stellaris team takes notes one day!

  • @PriyankaSingh-jw9ug

    @PriyankaSingh-jw9ug

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes man

  • @jam8539

    @jam8539

    11 ай бұрын

    with stellaris, time is the most important factor, as such anything that makes an invasion quicker must be used, orbital bombardment is necessary to weaken defensive armies, which if built properly cant be beat by conventional means

  • @luigimrlgaming9484

    @luigimrlgaming9484

    10 ай бұрын

    @@jam8539Just dump armies on it

  • @Steve-xi9ig
    @Steve-xi9ig2 жыл бұрын

    One example of an interstellar crisis response was when the Republic showed up on Aleen in the Clone Wars after a bunch of earthquakes. They deployed troops and fixed up a bunch of stuff, and provided humanitarian relief, and then packed up and left.

  • @andorfedra

    @andorfedra

    2 жыл бұрын

    Excellent example Steve.

  • @gonkdroid4603
    @gonkdroid46032 жыл бұрын

    One thing I like in the Warhammer 40k universe is that the attacker almost never waits to gain space supremacy to land ground forces. Meaning that orbital bombardment is a factor, but not an automatic win button

  • @eboranshard6220

    @eboranshard6220

    2 жыл бұрын

    You even see it in Star Wars ! Clone wars era had many battles where Clones would be put into drop ships way before exiting hyper space and the entire landing force and fighter bomber support is ready the very moment the ships exit hyper space !

  • @davidthomas2870

    @davidthomas2870

    2 жыл бұрын

    40k also has an unfortunately accurate idea of how long space wars will take, and a better idea than most fiction than most scifi does, but even 40k lowballs the likely scale of how many people will be involved. Not hundreds of thousands or millions like in 40k, but billions, trillions or even more. A truly mind boggling number of people, likely so many that your soldiers outnumber the original inhabitants and form a population of their own

  • @lordofchromius8206

    @lordofchromius8206

    2 жыл бұрын

    Part of the reason for that is that ships in 40K, especially among the Imperium and Chaos are expensive. A ship that is lost is something that is felt, especially the bigger it is. And that is not including ancient, unreplaceable ships. The end result is you have ships that usually avoid fighting one another unless they are confident they can come out of the fight relatively intact or they have no choice but to fight. Hence how planetary ships via orbital insertion can occur without difficulty. It's easy to see this considering that that there have been more land battles compared to space battles.

  • @randomdude8202

    @randomdude8202

    2 жыл бұрын

    40k has right idea about planetary invasions, and such operations surely would require millions of people involved based on defences, but to be fair if it ever happens those millions probably will be replaced by machine combatants. Even now they started to take over on battlefields, drone usage in latest wars is an example.

  • @davidthomas2870

    @davidthomas2870

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@randomdude8202 effectively to invade a planet you'll have to be making more soldiers and food and weapons on site, so there may be humans still involved but theyll likely be overseeing self replicating arms factories and armies of drones if at all. Also millions is lowballing a bit. Itll be more like billions, maybe tens or hundreds of billions of combatants

  • @triaenmarsh107
    @triaenmarsh1072 жыл бұрын

    The "corporation" Star Force in the book series of the same name covers planetary relief in a few parts of the books. Truly massive scale but the Archons are ageless and have the time to implement these relief efforts slowly.

  • @Nerd_Detective
    @Nerd_Detective2 жыл бұрын

    It drives me mad every time someone suggests that instead of invading a planet, you'd simply level every major population center until the resistance stops, so I'm glad you covered this topic. Destroying cities from orbit and massacring millions (or billions) of civilians in the process... why do that? Unless genocide is your war goal (see: Earth-Mimbari War and Human-Covenant War) it's contrary to your interests. If the planet has no value, why are you attacking it? If it does have value, why are you destroying it? But more so than the utilitarian question, I'm glad you also highlighted the moral question. Today we regard nuclear ICBMs as our most terrible weapons, an absolute last-resort because of the dire costs involved (human, political, economic, etc.). I see no reason for equally (or more!) devastating weapons to become normalized just because everyone's in space now... unless the setting presents an utterly depraved empire ruled by monsters. I feel like even in such setting, the mass deployment of WMDs would be a horrifying event that shows the danger of the aggressor, not just a casual thing that happens every day in wars.

  • @thalgrond
    @thalgrond2 жыл бұрын

    Grand Admiral Thrawn pulled off a couple of operations that were pretty close to what you're describing as "planetary demonstrations." There were a number of times where he redirected the New Republic's resources by threatening a raid or assault against a particular target, thus keeping them off balance and allowing his smaller force to strike devastating blows wherever the Republic's forces were redirected away from.

  • @starmada105

    @starmada105

    2 жыл бұрын

    Much more prevalent, the rebellion did pretty much the same thing described in the video over Sullust just before the Battle of Endor.

  • @thalgrond

    @thalgrond

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@starmada105 I haven't seen/read this. What is it in?

  • @starmada105

    @starmada105

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@thalgrond A bunch of stuff. It was mentioned in an offhand comment in ROTJ, it’s in a few novels, the first mission of Bf2 2017 is to blow up a ship that discovered the Empire knew that Sullust was a diversion, etc.

  • @thalgrond

    @thalgrond

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@starmada105 Huh. Nice.

  • @bleachorange

    @bleachorange

    2 жыл бұрын

    The orbital siege of coruscant with cloaked asteroids was particularly clever.

  • @johnclinnick3969
    @johnclinnick39692 жыл бұрын

    In my own personal worldbuilding project, which is on a massive extra-galactic scope, the notion of full planetary bombardment is still highly controversial. One of the main reasons is that it is ludicrously wasteful. The vast majority of planets within the universe I'm working on are completely uninhabitable, which makes terraformable planets extremely rare, and beyond that, finding a naturally inhabitable planet is like finding a needle in a mountain range. The more you bomb a perfectly livable planet, the more effort and resources you're going to require in order to make it livable again. Not to mention, you'd be destroying most, if not all of the highly refined resources and technologies already established on the planet by your enemy. Why destroy absolutely everything your enemy has built, when you can capture and repurpose it for yourself? Obviously, this is just one reason among thousands, but I feel as though it is a strong argument against orbital bombardment.

  • @Justin-cw7zf

    @Justin-cw7zf

    2 жыл бұрын

    I’m interested in trying some sci fi world building too. How’s your galaxy going?

  • @johnclinnick3969

    @johnclinnick3969

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@Justin-cw7zf Awesome! My worldbuilding has been slow the past few weeks, but I’m starting to pick up the pace again.

  • @Justin-cw7zf

    @Justin-cw7zf

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@johnclinnick3969 nice to hear. Your concept is really unique so I’m glad your moving along just fine

  • @morgatron4639

    @morgatron4639

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@johnclinnick3969 I've been off and on world building for a while now, and I actually want your thoughts on how to conceptually justify a common sci-fi trope. I want to have a type 3 civilization that evolved from an apex predator species, physiologically similar to Turians from mass effect. The key difference being that culturally they not highly militarized, (until a certain incident) to go with a theory of mine that a species evolved from predators would actually be less preemptively violent than herbivores, since genetically they never needed to keep tabs on other creatures unless they needed food. (Zebras always having to watch lions, lions not caring to watch zebras, etc.) The only problem is, and (I haven't known anyone else to think this through either) why would a species at or near the top of the food chain evolve intelligence at all? Why wouldn't they just cruise around in their optimized predatorial form for millions of years like sharks or crocodiles? I need to come up with a planetary history that caused predators to develop intelligence, build tools, culture and civilization without having to develop the same paranoia of a species more often preyed upon... I know this is a complicated question, but I never get to talk to anyone else even remotely into this stuff. What do you think?

  • @johnclinnick3969

    @johnclinnick3969

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@morgatron4639 You know, that's a good question. I'm actually in a similar boat myself with one of the species I've created; an incredibly dangerous hyper-carnivore with full-on sapience. Albeit, I haven't yet dedicated the time to come up with a solution regarding their evolution. A few things have come to mind though, so I suppose I can offer up some suggestions. For one, evolution is a highly randomized non-linear process, sometimes resulting in organisms with odd or just downright inefficient adaptations that stick around far longer than they otherwise should. Perhaps the precursors of your species experienced a random mutation which helped to increase brain size, despite the fact that an apex predator wouldn't necessarily need such a thing. Brains are energy hungry organs, so paired with a resource rich environment, an apex predator could theoretically develop higher and higher levels of intelligence while also being able to maintain their predatory traits (claws, teeth, sharp eyesight, high endurance, etc). Alternatively, one of these precursor species might not have been apex predators at all, and simply experienced a series of mutations/environmental changes which promoted the development of intelligence. However, before true sapience could be achieved, the environment could make a turn for the worse, limiting resources and "forcing" these precursors to develop predatory traits to maintain their developing nervous system. Afterall, meat tends to be great brain fuel. This pairing of rising intelligence and increase in predatory traits could reasonably accelerate each other's development. You could also go with a slightly convoluted reversal of the previous situation: reduction in predatory traits resulting in an increase to intelligence, followed by an environmental change/mutation which promotes the re-evolution of predatory traits before sapience develops. Once more, this could lead to a situation where both sets of traits accelerate each other's development. The truth is, evolution and "why" things happen the way they do is very complex and potentially self-contradicting. I mean, there are SO many things that went into the evolution of our own intelligence; the development of bipedalism, reduction in jaw size, loss of hair, the ability to sweat, a developing taste for meat, and so much more lead to what our species became. I would suggest analyzing the biological features of your species, and brainstorm ways in which those traits could have influenced one another over the course of your species' evolution, and how those traits could promote a rise in intelligence. Sorry if my reply is a bit long; I am kind of passionate about this sort of thing.

  • @nicholaspratt8473
    @nicholaspratt84732 жыл бұрын

    Another amazingly informative and well designed video essay! You could convince someone you were reading a history book from the future!

  • @williamkarbala5718
    @williamkarbala57182 жыл бұрын

    This video expertly explains something I learned in business school, the trough of expectation. Every new invention many military, brings high hopes that are cut down to size when it’s limits are discovered.

  • @libertyprime7911

    @libertyprime7911

    Жыл бұрын

    many?

  • @novaexplorer2397
    @novaexplorer23972 жыл бұрын

    I agree completely with the point about orbital bombardment. Now if I ever hear anyone say “don’t have an army when you can just bombard from orbit”, I’ll just point to any recent war and ask “so we should just nuke the enemy into oblivion?”

  • @ThePowerthatbeMe

    @ThePowerthatbeMe

    2 жыл бұрын

    Well orbital bombardment isn’t nuking it’s raining artillery from a safe distance like we have been doing.

  • @snspartan714al2

    @snspartan714al2

    2 жыл бұрын

    When using weapon of mass destruction vs using massive invasion force you first have to ask if the location you are attacking has something you want... Or do you just want to deny the enemy that location and whether or not it is useful to you is unimportant... Then you should also ask if we are talking about a single planet war or a war across multiple planets (or even solar systems and/or galaxies) ... If it's a single planet... Probably should hesitate before using weapons of mass destruction wether they be nukes or large rocks dropped from space at extremely high speed, because they will more than likely have lasting effects on you even if you keep it limited and don't need to be able to use the location... But if you are dealing with multiple planets and don't need the planet to remain habitable... Well turn it to ash and glass

  • @Servo_M

    @Servo_M

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@snspartan714al2 But if you do that the enemy will do it as well. Remember the ladder.

  • @robertwilson973

    @robertwilson973

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@Servo_M That's assuming that the enemy is on the same level as you technologically. If they are not, then bombardment has it's place and time.

  • @moriskurth628

    @moriskurth628

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@robertwilson973 If they are technologically so far behind that they can't fight back, why bother bombing them from orbit? Would be like bringing a .50 Cal to kill a fly, massive overkill, and your neighbors, and your population, might not respond all that well to such an overreaction. Like, what would be the point in killing primitives with orbital fire if they are no threat to you?

  • @Woodmaster437
    @Woodmaster4372 жыл бұрын

    The evacuation of Romulus in star trek was a massive crisis response situation.

  • @pranavghantasala6808

    @pranavghantasala6808

    Жыл бұрын

    Starfleet actually does a lot of crisis response operations, come to think of it. One example is in TNG S6E19 "Lessons" where the Enterprise D evacuates the settlers on Bersallis III from the firestorms

  • @cypher4783
    @cypher47832 жыл бұрын

    One type of strategic support ship that be used would be a factory ship. The thought being you need a way to repair and replace damaged equipment.

  • @majorplothole2620
    @majorplothole26202 жыл бұрын

    love your guys' stuff, really appreciate it as it helps me with the writing projects I'm working on. One reason for invasion I'd like to expand up on is securing resources. You could typically bombard a location of all military installations, then invade a planet to secure the resources. However, if the planet or the people on the planet are the resources you're trying to harvest, then it becomes less likely you'd risk damaging either in an orbital bombardment. There are several movies and games where the aliens have come down in order to deprive Earth of it's natural resources. Sometimes water, sometimes oxygen, sometimes... people. It kind of disturbs the balance of what is and is not a good invasion plan and can directly limit the attacker in what weapons and equipment they can bring down with them. Either way, you've given me a lot to think about and consider in my current writing projects and I appreciate it, greatly!

  • @zealousdoggo
    @zealousdoggo2 жыл бұрын

    The thing with orbital bombardment is quite the same for naval bombardments, there will be a planet that just won't die until you go there and shoot everyone. Famously, Iwo Jima was so shelled that the soldiers initially thought that they had killed all the Japanese only for them to spring out and start firing when the Americans were exposed

  • @mill2712

    @mill2712

    2 жыл бұрын

    An underwater colony on europa would be just the world you're thinking of.

  • @intheshade3018

    @intheshade3018

    2 жыл бұрын

    Same with Tarawa And iirc the shelling/bombing of the Normandy coast didn't go well either Inclimate weather and poor visibility definitely played a part in Normandy's case though

  • @occultatumquaestio5226
    @occultatumquaestio52262 жыл бұрын

    This is an exquisite video, bringing out many thoughts shared by myself and a great many other individuals into deep detail. While orbital bombardment will be a game changer with it uses, depending on the actually tactical/strategic goals, there will be some situations will orbital bombardment is not possible and planetary invasions are necessary. Examples of such as shown in the video are; 1.) capturing enemies which are needed alive (dead men give no intel nor can order surrenders), 2.) acquiring resources (the pristine farmland or rarelementium mine you wanted to conquer being reduced to a barren wastes makes your war of conquest pointless), 3.) cultural or religious reasons (the Holy Relic/World must be preserved at all costs), 4.) economic reasons (that world possess a fifth of the nation's industry, destroying it will cripple your further efforts to win the war), 5.) retrieving friendly forces (you don't have the resources to waste a million well trained troops with years of experiences, oh and your top leaders and strategists need to be alive to lead forces to victory), 6.) avoid civilian non-combatant casualties, especially if they are citizens of your nation (hearts and minds need to be won to avoid a coup; or if one of your worlds is under occupation and needs to be liberated for post-war reconstruction [this is particularly true for civil wars]), and many more various scenarios and technologies. Quite intriguing standardize classification of landing craft. It is something that I think would work well in development in future sci-fi works. The design and process of the escalation ladder was also fascinating. It takes a lots to go very seriously deadly for a military situation to go to a Total War, hence why the last one was over 75 years ago. Even in the modern day, there are still reasons as to there being healthy infantry with combat knives rather than swarm drone icbms. Overall, again, a rather fascinating video exploring the concept of planetary invasions and providing a one video essay to show others the importance of such tactical/strategic in potential interstellar conflicts. 46:28 ; Some Antares self-inserting there, clever Marc.

  • @Ditidos

    @Ditidos

    2 жыл бұрын

    Planetary bombardment is not why planetary invasions would be a bad idea or obsolete. Your points 1, 4 and 6 can be done with a simple blockade of the planet by your space navy (in most cases 3 too, but I grant you particularly strange cultural reasons would provoke this). Point 5 is better done by a specialized force for that task instead of a planetary invasion force. Finally, point 2 is absurd and not realistic, if you want resources planets are the last area you will look, they are huge gravity wells and getting stuff from a planetary surface is also expensive. If for some reason the resources you look are in a planet, even in one you own, what you would want is to blow it up into a million pieces, unless the thing is biological, in that case you want to create space farms or something similar in bodies with less gravity for the purposes of take-off (like a space station with rotational gravity or artificial gravity, heck if the organism itself doesn't care about gravity microgravity is even better) and care little for the actual planet (you want examples to study and replicate, if the planet has sentient life trading information about the biosphere is going to be relatively easy, which would allow for bioweapons too, but that's a diferent can of worms). Of course, not having any kind of army is a problem. But you need one whose purpose would be to stop coupes and terrorism, maybe have occasional skirmishes against rebel forces, but a planetary invasion is just expensive and innecesary. Well, I guess it might make sense as a defensive move, but only if your enemy also does planetary invasions which isn't that effective from an offensive standpoint (coups and rebellions would be the one case were this situation could happen). All that said, handwavium can nulify these things and make planetary invasions feasible, but that's the "a wizard did it option", is always there for the taking if you really want that happening.

  • @Hel1mutt

    @Hel1mutt

    2 жыл бұрын

    rip the space in between paragraphs lol

  • @robertwilson973

    @robertwilson973

    2 жыл бұрын

    The big issue I have with the "Religious site/relic" argument is that any space faring race that is able to travel between stars would most likely have dropped its religious long ago. After all, they would have been exposed to other cultures and races along the way. Or at least seen evolution take similar paths on different worlds. Also the "Resources" argument seems weak at best. If you can mine a moon or asteroid why worry about a planet's resources (although the farmland lost would be the only downside here - armies move on their stomachs) if you have easier, more accessible alternatives?

  • @Ditidos

    @Ditidos

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@robertwilson973 While I agree with your second point. I doubt the first one, religion and spirituality doesn't seem to really go down as a whole despite conection and the encounter of multiple cultures. And while is true that some religions and spiritual beliefs go inherently against an advanced spacefaring civilizations other ones do the opposite and usually given enough time new beliefs appear that accounts for the new normal.

  • @occultatumquaestio5226

    @occultatumquaestio5226

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@Ditidos ; When it comes to navel blockades, they don't help with capturing enemies if you need their intel, though I'll give you the fact a smaller incursion force can do that. 4 only works for NBs if you yourself don't need the economic output, if you do then you would need conqueror it. For 6, if you have one of your own worlds attempting to violently seceded or alien forces have occupied one of your planets a blockade may likely to be in their advantaged. Also an NB only works only if 1A.) you have enough ships to set up a blockade in the first place, 1B.) you have enough ships that you can maintain a blockage for a prolonged period of time rather then send them to face enemies ships, and 2.) the planet in question is not self-sufficient, otherwise they can build up both blockage runners and anti-ships weapons to strike at your ships there. A historical example of this is when Germany tried to blockade Britian twice, but failed both times due to a numerical lacking of vessels. For point 5, a spec ops can extract 1, 2 or even a dozen, but what about 100, 1000, or a million, sometimes mass evacuations need to be taken place; be it a military evac or just disaster relief. For 2, in the case of resources like Hydrogen and Iron then yes, going to war over those do not make much sense, hence I said "rare-element-ium", for things like iridium and lutetium, or hand-waviums like dilithium and eezo, in which significant deposits are well, rarer; and if the planet is also habitable/inhabited most factions wouldn't just blow it up and strip-mine it. For more biological resources recall that even though planes are faster that water-going going ships, most trade is still done my more traditional oceanic-shipping. You have been discussing costs at lot, but while yes moving supplies out of a gravity well is expensive, so is the creation and maintaining of massive space instillations, and if the materials are sensitive having go trough gravity wells than just across a planet is also an expense in itself. So whether doing that or acquiring planets through war, which is cheaper is an answer that varies between Sci-Fi universes and is something we cannot as of yet provide a definitive answer on IRL until we actually have the ability to do such things giving the untested variables. Plus while as you said some organisms don't care about space microgravity, there are just as many others that are the exact opposite; of which a significant portion of the Human population is included, hence the commonality of the saying "cabin fever". While some of us could and would likely enjoy being in such an environment, a great many others could only bare it for so long, be it Human, non-Human sapients, pets, livestock, crops, or medicinal biological organisms. Then going to 3, a great many are not going to take cultural of religious sites being 'desecrated' be they a 'Holy region' or something more mundane like a natural wild-life preserve.

  • @blacktemplar2323
    @blacktemplar23232 жыл бұрын

    Regarding the threat of naval invasion during the gulf war, during an Interview General Schwarzkopf mentioned, that if the Iraqi forces had redeployed from the coast the US forces might have used the opportunity to launch a naval landing. Military plans are not set in stone and are adapted to the situation. In this specific case, the iraqi army had two choices: 1) commit large forces to coastal defence to prevent/oppose a military landing or 2) redeploy their forces and allow the enemy to land a large force in th rear of their army. Edit: Regarding 40k Drop Pods, there is a version which can deploy a single dreadnought (armoured walker). Just a minor correction

  • @anonymousrex5207
    @anonymousrex52072 жыл бұрын

    You don't reference the show anywhere in your video, so I would highly recommend watching the 90's animated series Exosquad. The entire show is built around more or less what WWII would look like if played out across multiple planets using futuristic technology. They show all of the types of combat scenarios you list and do a great job of showing how much work goes on in preparation for a large scale space military campaign... from recon and intel to rehearsal and execution. One of my favorite sci-fi shows of all time it is definitely something any sci-fi nerd has to watch.

  • @117Jorn
    @117Jorn2 жыл бұрын

    So far we've gotten Starships, Ground Vehicles and Invasion Craft. I would really like to see an Incoming dedicated towards Starfighter/Interceptors, as well as one reguarding firearms that militaries would use in the future.

  • @alek7998

    @alek7998

    2 жыл бұрын

    I would like to see the single infantryman's gear or something like that

  • @morgatron4639

    @morgatron4639

    2 жыл бұрын

    Star fighters don't make logical sense in the era of space combat. Think like in the expanse, but everything should actually have better point defense capability. Railguns could fire projectiles that burst into micro particles at certain distances, something like that can hit incoming torpedoes kilometers away. Torpedoes/missiles in space are naturally way smaller, faster and agile than a manned fighter/interceptor could every be. When point defense is optimized enough to hit something like that, what the hell could a manned fighter/bomber do? They would be instantly destroyed before entering visual range of a larger craft.

  • @117Jorn

    @117Jorn

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@morgatron4639 *Glances up at the video* Didn't this video just describe how predictions like that often are proved to be horribly inaccurate? They thought invasions were a thing of the past - then Korea happened. They thought Dogfighting was a thing of the past - then Vietnam happened. Also, you are too busy thinking about Expanse logic - while it is a fine show and an accurate depiction of IRL space combat as we predict it will be like today, the fact of the matter is we have no idea how technology will advance. As far as we know we'll create fighter-sized energy shields or some crazy tech between now and then. I for one doubt that craft like fighters and bombers will ever truly be rendered obsolete. Their role may change, but they will always have a place.

  • @morgatron4639

    @morgatron4639

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@117Jorn I get that, I just think that in space the rules are different. Everything has more effective range, there's no cover or a horizon to be behind. Ballistic weapons have no air resistance and lasers have less blooming. I very much believe atmospheric fighters will still be viable for the same reason templin explains that planetary invasions still are. Aircraft excel in that environment, but I don't see star fighters ever being developed fully. The purpose of fighters in space can be achieved by missiles, the laws of physics favor that. By the time shielding tech is developed enough to protect a small craft from railguns or continuous beam lasers from a large ship, imagine the kind of shielding the larger ship would have, plus thick armor. What does a fighter do to that? I will concede that there may be a specific era of technology where fighters will have a purpose, something like in battlestar galactica where railgun tech isn't sufficiently miniturized to target smaller things and fighters are equipped with nuclear weapons. Although it's still hard to imagine that the vipers would've been nearly as important if the galactica hard a good array of AA guns similar to the CWIS that we have on navy ships in the real world, which already function better than how PDCs are shown in the expanse. Not a jab at the expanse or BSG for that matter, those are my two all time favorite shows.

  • @117Jorn

    @117Jorn

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@morgatron4639 Perhaps. Personally, I do somewhat agree that space fighters won't be the best option in the future. However I do believe in the application of single-occupant space combat weapons because as effective as missiles and whatnot may be - there are ways to counter missiles, and there are parts of Space that aren't as empty as you might think. I think we may see the rise of more... humanoid-looking weapons - think Mobile Suits from Gundam. Unlike a space fighter, its guns aren't fixed and it is capable of operating in a more three dimensional space - plus it can be used for more than just combat, and can just as easily be used for repairing space stations and ships. The big critique then however is that the more moving parts are involved, the more expensive maintenance will be. This may be true, but if the rewards exceed the costs then it all sorta balances out. A lot of times when armies build weapons of war, it is kinda of a net loss for the economy because a tank can only be used for warfare until its stripped for parts to be melted down and built into something else. But something like a mech suit has usage outside of combat - making them more economically friendly to civilian, industrial and military use.

  • @raf74hawk12
    @raf74hawk122 жыл бұрын

    I feel like MAD is the best argument for the use of landing forces. If you bomb the shit out of your enemy's planets just to achieve strategic objectives, why shouldn't they do the same to you?

  • @robertwilson973

    @robertwilson973

    2 жыл бұрын

    The old TV serious Babylon 5 had the Shadow Cities deep underground (which would indicate orbital bombardment occurring). As the show progressed they even had the Shadow's and Vorlon's resorting to orbital bombardment against each other's allied worlds. They never attacked each other directly however.

  • @marijnvanbennekom3652

    @marijnvanbennekom3652

    2 жыл бұрын

    But also if you want to conquer the planet the last thing you want to do is make it a lifeless wasteland. Cause if you get the planet everything destroyed is something that will cost you money to rebuild. Also the more angry the native people are at you the costlier it's going to be to integrate them.

  • @jacko2244

    @jacko2244

    2 жыл бұрын

    Well, you aren't expecting to lose

  • @clomiancalcifer

    @clomiancalcifer

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@marijnvanbennekom3652 This assumes the desire to conquer and integrate. Which considering some situations would be inefficient. Especially in settings where technology makes 'fixing it in post production' easy. Better off destroying the biosphere and fixing it later... Yes, what if someone does it to you, that's why you don't let someone else do it to you...

  • @snickims9717

    @snickims9717

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@clomiancalcifer I suppose if your a genocidal state that has no need of more territory then orbital bombardments work, in any scenario where the parties involved are not that then Orbital bombardments are not exactly game winning.

  • @JukeboxTheGhoul
    @JukeboxTheGhoul2 жыл бұрын

    On the Dropship section, I was wondering whether you would talk about tackling the delta v requirements to lift back out of the atmosphere in a way that Earth 1 science and capabilities currently understand things.

  • @nolanturner5607

    @nolanturner5607

    Жыл бұрын

    That will wholy depend on where technology has reached at the point in time we're executing planetary invasions. Many books I've read had magnetic field manipulation for surface to orbit/orbit to surface craft. Others just the vague anti gravity/gravity manipulation concept. Several more just had hyper efficient, high output engines that still followed physics as we know them currently, but diminished the limitations they presented.

  • @iansaviet600
    @iansaviet6002 жыл бұрын

    "Because we want their stuff intact" is a great reason for invasion

  • @kevinbryer2425
    @kevinbryer24252 жыл бұрын

    I would think that glassing a planet would be the exception rather than the rule, because doing so inevitably destroys biological, economic, and even cultural resources worth preserving. And with sufficiently high mountains or deep enough tunnels, there is no guarantee that you will wipe out the enemy either. You might just eliminate all their restraint, and open up new resources for them to exploit that wouldn't be economical otherwise, that they can use to exact their revenge decades down the line. The interesting thing about planetary invasions that really wasn't touched upon is that they, theoretically, truly happen in three dimensions. Unlike amphibious assaults, which are limited to chokepoints by waterways and suitable beaches, or airborne assaults, which are limited by the volume of material that can be moved and the airspace you have access to, once you get to the planetary level, you can land anywhere. And flying into the teeth of the enemy defenses, for all it's cinematic glory, actually makes less sense. It actually makes more sense to land in the most isolated, or geographically inaccessible regions as possible to the defenders. Those easily defensible bastions that we all hate in Risk, like Australia, and Madagascar. Take your time, build up your forces, your logistics, even local production, so the locals will have a hard time striking back and ultimately dislodging you. All the while, surgical strikes can work on a global level to whittle down the locals ability to move to your position, and strike back in any capacity, and build up for the fight ahead with minimal collateral damage. Military bases, air and naval ports, military production and active units can be struck early and often to keep them off balance and isolated, unable to congregate into a force large enough to threaten your stronghold. While such a methodical approach might give the locals more time to mobilized militia units, and provide you with more targets when you finally do break out, these tend to be nearly as dangerous to the natives as they are to the invaders, and can only seriously threaten you on a strategic level with a great deal of plot armor.

  • @samueldimmock694

    @samueldimmock694

    2 жыл бұрын

    Unless of course you are more concerned with speed than casualties, in which case you just land commando teams to disable as many defenses as possible, then attack with as much power as you can muster and take out the remaining defenses as quickly as you can.

  • @clomiancalcifer

    @clomiancalcifer

    2 жыл бұрын

    People put lots of stock into cultural/biological/economic resources in these sorts of topics. But that suggests those things matter in an interstellar conflict between two alien species. Space is large, and resources plentiful, most species capable of breaching the interstellar void will have the technology to acquire a vast treasure of resources from interplanetary mining of uncontested uninhabited rocks that litter the place like egg shells in a omelet factory, making economic needs less...important. Most biospheres will be alien to one another, making it unlikely that one species would value another's 'biological assets' as they would largely be worthless to the other species. That only is exaggerated with culture 'resources'. EVen the idea of colonizing another world as a 'homeworld 2.0' is also kinda questionable as again the ecology and bio-compatibility would be at best imperfect and would require some kind of 'terraforming' and if you're going to terraform something several light years away you may as well do it the whole way....a real bottom up renovation....which would include biospheric sterilization and re-innoculation with a species own fauna and flora.

  • @codyyoung5946

    @codyyoung5946

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@clomiancalcifer While that is true, its not taking into account a wide variety of things. Does a species see orbital annihilation as dishonorable and prefer to fight its foes face to face? Is orbital bombardment ostracized or even a war crime to the galaxy? Is it a MAD situation where if one faction wipes out another's planet it is seen as an equivalent of declaring nuclear war? You have left out a lot variables and presumed sentient organisms would act purely on logic, when in fact just looking out a window would prove they do not.

  • @zincwing4475
    @zincwing44752 жыл бұрын

    I like two things the most in this video: Orbital bombardment might not be an unbeatable tactic, with sufficient shielding and anti space weapons, it might turn into a siege, or require ground troops to demolish planetary defences. Planets are big, and it might be possible to raid or attack one city because enemy forces need time to move.

  • @weldonwin

    @weldonwin

    Жыл бұрын

    Depends on the sci-fi universe in question and the planet. For example, in the Foundation series (The novels, not the Apple+ show), the Imperial Throneworld of Trantor is a colossal city world with a vast population. Storming the planet would be nearly impossible, but it's noted that you wouldn't need to actually invade. The planet's vast population and being totally covered in cities, means that Trantor is completely dependent on external shipments of food and water. All one would have to do is park their fleet in a cordon and blockade the planet and you could starve out Trantor without ever landing troops or firing a single shot.

  • @ledocteur7701
    @ledocteur7701 Жыл бұрын

    one thing that is often overlooked in the scale issue is that a conquest doesn't have to be total, there are multiple levels of conquest : -"soft" conquest, similar to UK and india, India was officially UK territory, but outside of political power, the everyday life of citizens was virtually unscathed, very few UK citizens moved to India so the population didn't mix, didn't had to adapt to UK custom, or anything like that at all. the conquest was essentially just on paper and India was more or less just a heavily bounded vassal. this requires virtually no troops beyond the initial war (whish may or may not happen at all), and is how the mongols managed to invade 20% of the world, despite having no fast mean to communicate, the winner is recognized as an official leader, but as little influence over the conquered territory. -"mild" conquest, spares troops are left in the conquered territories, just enough to be able to enforce your own laws, however little to no civilians move in, and the cultural identity of the territory is largely unchanged, this can lead to rebellions, but is relatively cheap to maintain. (might be hard to do for a full planet tho) -"hard" conquest, the conquered territory becomes undifferentiated to the rest of the winner state, populations move in and may be moved out, breaking any sort of strong cultural identity. in the short run, this is extremely expensive, and requires a lot of diplomacy before things start being stable. (essentially impossible on a heavily populated world)

  • @michaelwilson5860
    @michaelwilson5860 Жыл бұрын

    Side note, in WW2, naval destroyers (maybe the equivalent of a heavy assault ship at the time?) were also used as troop transport for some invasions, and offered fire support before/after dropping off the ground units. See Attu campaign.

  • @Stukov961
    @Stukov9612 жыл бұрын

    I want to say you could count operations on Ryloth both in Clone Wars and Rebels as crisis response. Especially the latter, where there was blockade running entirely focused on delivering humanitarian aid to the population of an occupied world.

  • @readingking1421
    @readingking14212 жыл бұрын

    "If this thing needs to shoot its guns, somebody screwed up" Meanwhile me, using Acclamators as frontline warships in Empire at War I love these types of videos, they're why I found this channel.

  • @robertdrexel2043

    @robertdrexel2043

    2 жыл бұрын

    Yeah. The Jedi learned this the hardway during the Battle of Ryloth. Got one of their Acclamators destroyed by large anti-air guns.

  • @darwinxavier3516

    @darwinxavier3516

    2 жыл бұрын

    Also, screen canon shows that they were the only warships the Republic had at the time. Made sense for them to be armed. The first appearance of the Venator was not the RotS or the CGI Clone Wars no matter what fanboys want to believe. It was actually in a later episode of the Genndy Clone Wars which predates the movie by months.

  • @robertdrexel2043

    @robertdrexel2043

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@darwinxavier3516 It was somewhere before the Battle of Christophsis that the Venator Class was introduced, but really the Republic wasn't without actual warships at the start of the war. They had the Dreadnaught Class, and those larger warships that have never been seen outside of background books and such.

  • @thecruzking

    @thecruzking

    2 жыл бұрын

    Well if I remember correctly if you remove the passengers from the ship. It runs with a crew of like 300ish. Which given its punching power is very efficient.

  • @Venator631

    @Venator631

    2 жыл бұрын

    Did someone say Venator?

  • @deathhog
    @deathhog2 жыл бұрын

    I want to point out that the acclimator was actually a warship before it was a ground ship. Yes it was absolutely intended to ferry troops, but was somewhat capable of operating independently. in the old Legends Cannon they were fearsome warships all on their own, capable of doing planetary bombardment, and breaking blockades. They were essentially smaller Star destroyers.

  • @Abdullah-mn6sw
    @Abdullah-mn6sw2 жыл бұрын

    I have been wondering about this for so long, thankfully you guys uploaded this video.

  • @rollinbacon2953
    @rollinbacon29532 жыл бұрын

    If anything, an orbital invasion should be a combination of D-Day and the landings at Okinawa. A heavy bombardment on a target location, small teams of airborne, fast-attack troops targeting orbital/ AA installations followed by the proper landings and seizure of roads and pathways near the beachhead. Get as much men and equipment on the ground as possible and spread out as much as possible

  • @lucks4fools978
    @lucks4fools9782 жыл бұрын

    For an interstellar Army I’ve envisioned, a planetary invasion only begins when Void Supremacy has been achieved (80% of void space must be achieved). The Army and Navy are two separate entities. With the navies sole role is to win the battle in space, as well as provided additional support (planetary bombardment) along with holding the space. The Navy does not fight on the ground, unless the marines have been deployed. The Army have their own ships, they act has their bases and transport. They are the exact same class of ships that is used in the navy, just much fewer in number and are unlikely able to hold and win the space battle by themselves. Anyway, once void supremacy has been achieved, the invasion will commence. The invasion is split into 3 phases. Those being: Phase 1. “The Softening”. This is where multiple points on the planet or area will be “softened” by light orbital bombardment (with light being a relative term here. It’s best that a target or point is destroyed but even if it isn’t, it’s likely to be decimated). After a set period of time , drop pods will be shot into the atmosphere and to other key areas, as well as to sweep up any points that haven’t been knocked out. The drop pods will contain combat droids. This will tie up any local forces within the area, forcing them to commit men, and ammunition to contain the attack. Even if the initial droid attacks fail to truly do any damage, it will still soften up the enemy garrison/forces. Up next is the 2nd phase. Phase 2. “Take and Hold”. From here, the invasion begins. Dropships and fighters will descend from their home ships and enter the atmosphere to begin an attack. The fighters will strife any defensive position to lockdown the troops or lockup any reinforcements coming to bolster the defenders. And here the drop ships will disembark the Heavy Assault Infantry (My version of the stormtrooper) to create and take a beachhead. Once a beachhead has been secured. The invasion moves onto the next and final phases. Phase 3. “The Sweeping”. With a beachhead secured, a Forward Base can be established. There tanks, artillery, troops, supplies and equipment can be deployed on the ground. Note that the troops here are different from the HAI (Heavy Assault Infantry) to the regular army. The HAI is a part of the wider Army. The Infantry is to conquer the rest of the planet.

  • @maggondatreides4783
    @maggondatreides47832 жыл бұрын

    I absolutely adore that you featured the Raven from Elysium, i love that craft so much, it's ridiculous, but that's what I'd want to arrive in. It's just too damn cool.

  • @anthonygrubb8211
    @anthonygrubb82112 жыл бұрын

    So... You mentioned in the video that there was; military escalation (as you covered extensively), diplomatic, and economic escalation. Perhaps in the future you can cover how an interstellar empire can use the other two escalations?

  • @anthonygrubb8211

    @anthonygrubb8211

    11 ай бұрын

    Back a year after the comment politely requesting this again

  • @exudeku
    @exudeku2 жыл бұрын

    The Classic "I will yeet a fucking asteroid" move of Char Aznable will always work

  • @masterthiefesq2440
    @masterthiefesq24402 жыл бұрын

    "WE'RE ON AN EXPRESS ELEVATOR TO HELL, GOIN' DOWN!"

  • @paulsmart4672
    @paulsmart46722 жыл бұрын

    The words "orbital bombardment" could never lose their meaning for me, no matter how many times you say them.

  • @alexandresilveira6905
    @alexandresilveira69052 жыл бұрын

    This was a very well thought out video, thank you guys!

  • @devinranaldi1751
    @devinranaldi17512 жыл бұрын

    Planetary Demonstration: Mobile Suit Gundam: Stardust Memory. The Earth Federation fleet was holding a Naval Review as a means to showcase how much of the fleet they rebuilt after the One Year War and to act as a warning against Zeon splinter factions. One such splinter faction stole a nuclear armed, Federation Gundam and used to to wreck two thirds of the fleet.

  • @Sorain1

    @Sorain1

    2 жыл бұрын

    I think that's a solid example. The entire point was to say 'We could invade you with this, and you can't stop us.' Which was rather solidly counterpointed with a nuclear exclamation point by the Zeon splinter faction involved. It's also a solid example of why you need to have tight controls on your WMD's, because the amount of egg on your face if they are turned on you can be truly exceptional.

  • @andrewthwaaa4009
    @andrewthwaaa40092 жыл бұрын

    An SF novel “Crest of the Stars” depicts a space-dwelling civilization called Abh Empire. This civilization’s main species is a type of engineered human, Abriel human, which has higher adaptations to space environment than on land, and they culturally do not like surface life. They have basically every resource produced on ships so they don’t necessarily need land, either. ( I don’t remember why they capture planets if they are so nomadic, probably because they are copying their creators, which they destroyed with their own hands) The way they capture a planet is to totally eliminate this planet’s space travel abilities and than diplomatically persuade this planet to let the empire run the space port for them. The planet surface government will remain kinda independent besides taxes or other specific orders from the empire. If the people on planet want to fly again, they can apply to be the pilots of the Abh fleet or own short-ranged transportation ships. Surface human can join the ruling class of Abh Empire if they served and get rewarded in the fleet, but their offspring must be engineered to be Abriel human instead of original species. The title they earned will pass on to Abriel offsprings. I didn’t finish the novel, so a lot of their culture is not explained clearly here. But I wonder if this “twisted” kind of civilization will actually plan to drop on to ground for a full-scale planet invasion. (They do have landing marines in their fleet, though, since surface mission like rescue crashed ships and personnel is always possible.)

  • @TheTrueAdept

    @TheTrueAdept

    2 жыл бұрын

    From my understanding, Crest of the Stars doesn't really do invasions, you either surrender the moment you can't fight _or_ get bombed back to the stone age.

  • @nulnoh219

    @nulnoh219

    2 жыл бұрын

    Space Mongols. Got it.

  • @andrewthwaaa4009

    @andrewthwaaa4009

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@nulnoh219 ocean civilization to be more precise. Oh and you remind me one thing that Abh empire’s creators were island cultured people on earth. They were against the globalization and thus abandoned by the progression of technology. They managed to colonize astral belts and build their home there, while the main strain of world already started light year migration. Abh engineered super humans and send them to explore univers, using old school rocket-propelled ships (which is like send them to death).

  • @grahamcarpenter5135

    @grahamcarpenter5135

    2 жыл бұрын

    Isn't that an anime? Had no idea it was originally a novel

  • @richardchandler6969

    @richardchandler6969

    2 жыл бұрын

    The animated adaptation was really good too. Probably one of the more plausible and well written examples in the space opera genre.

  • @caseyrollins6933
    @caseyrollins69332 жыл бұрын

    One thing I don't think is looked at too much during a planetary invasion is the need to use local resources to aid long term campaigns. If you and your enemy have vastly different manufacturing or even biology you would likely want ships equipped for heavy manufacturing and even food production/processing. Unlike here on earth, where I have the means to steal food and weapons from an enemy. There is no guarantee you would be able to do this on an alien world fighting an alien race. Sherman's March is a good example that highlights what I mean. Sherman marched so far so fast that supply lines of the time couldn't keep up. He would steal food from local farmers to supply his troops. If the troops you bring to a planetary invasion don't have the constitution or the local cuisine is deadly to them, you'll want to bring ships capable of producing their own or processing local food. A similar thing with weapons if the race you are fighting are capable of just using their bodies as weapons. You'll want to bring some level of manufacturing and mining resources so you aren't completely reliant on a supply chain to survive.

  • @user-eg5yy7vs9s
    @user-eg5yy7vs9s Жыл бұрын

    A truly amaizing explanation. Well done.

  • @ArionRDAW
    @ArionRDAW2 жыл бұрын

    In Legend of Galactic Heroes, the forces of Reinhard von Lohengramm deliberately allowed a planetary bombardment by their opponent the Lippstadt League to proceed despite being in a position to prevent the massacre. The grotesque aftermath was then used as propaganda against the League, causing desertions and loss of popular support, thus hastening their eventual defeat.

  • @DerpsWithWolves
    @DerpsWithWolves2 жыл бұрын

    Taking a different angle on this, I think it's also fair to say that the difficulty of an invasion is directly proportional to how much you *don't* want to destroy. If you're keen to scour the entire planet, ecosystems be damned, all you need is a suitably large asteroid and an engine to push it. Conversely, if you want to retain critical infrastructure, planet-side resources, some degree of the local population, or the capacity for longer-term diplomatic relations the requisite manpower and resource investment increases accordingly. Thus, the more granulated the target profile, the more precise and specialized the equipment you'll need to actually achieve your objectives. Another factor not necessarily discussed here, is time - or rather, efficiency vs effectiveness. Logistical limitations might prevent you from amassing a large invasion force for a given planet. You might only be able to spare a large fleet to secure orbital superiority before they're needed elsewhere, or the sheer size of force required might not even be within your reach. In any case, even if you could, the wholesale bombardment or invasion of a planet is inefficient and wasteful of your resources, as is the opposed landing of troops on the surface in less-than-ideal conditions. Assuming you're not losing on other fronts, if you have orbital superiority, you can choose when and where to fight and dictate the cadence of the operation through 'energy superiority' to use air combat terminology - that being a higher altitude where the enemy must expend great energy to reach you, but you need do a lot less to reach them. Let's think of an example with Earth; a successful invasion that removes our capacity to resist, with minimal resource expenditure relative to planet-side defensive assets. We'll also be trying to retain as much planetary infrastructure as we can. Stage 1 of such an invasion begins years in advance, with reconnaissance efforts, passive and active, and depending on the timeline may even include sabotage and destabilizing the local political landscape. Sowing dissent or even emboldening local populations who might be supportive to your efforts could even be in the cards, depending on who it is doing the invading, or even the deployment of seemingly natural diseases, the covert triggering of something like a supervolcano, and other disruptive acts might also factor in. For the rest of this invasion, let's assume we stopped at reconnaissance, since we're trying to retain local infrastructure in a usable state. Stage 2 begins with the insertion of first-strike capable craft into planetary orbit. Ideally, this would be done undetected, allowing such craft to seed Earth's orbit with different warheads on a variety of orbits, prior to simultaneous activation at the beginning of stage three. Stage 3, the first overt military action, is to render the planet's detection and communication systems inert. Nuclear warheads previously left in synchronized orbits descend and detonate in the upper atmosphere, too high to cause damage on the ground, but more than potent enough to fry military tracking and targeting radar, disrupt radio communications, civilian power grids, and other electronic infrastructure. Concurrently, planetary satellite networks will be targeted, as will known connection points for major underwater cables and communication infrastructure such as internet server hubs. Now that the planet is in the dark, if everything went well, many portions of the world may be under the assumption they're experiencing a local event, and not understand the true ramifications of it, nor be able to effectively coordinate a response and mobilize as quickly as they should. Stage 4 begins with the selection of military targets and certain points of critical infrastructure. Runways, missile silos, command centres, armories, motor pools, naval yards, warships currently at sea, and anything else that might otherwise pose future resistance or be more difficult to hit if given time to move off-site. By this point, the time period of states are determined mostly by the orbital period of the ships engaging in limited bombardment - so it could be anywhere from one to several hours, based upon how high an orbit they choose to take either to avoid detection or provide a security buffer space in which to shoot down any planet-launched missiles that do make it out of the atmosphere. Stage 5 next shifts from military targets, to *parts* of logistical targets. For instance, you might not want to destroy the power grid, or the power plants themselves (unless you have better ones you mean to install later, and don't care) so instead all you need to do is take out the accumulators at each power facility, or strike local transformers. By comparison, they'll be much easier for you to fix later. For targets like New York, there's no need to hit the city directly when you can just hit the bridges. Elsewhere mountain passes, rivers, ports, canals, and any singular points which, if destroyed, would inhibit travel are being struck. Stage 6 shifts into more opportunistic operations, with the selection of new priority targets as they appear to eliminate future opposition, and is also the transition into planetary operations in an isolated scale. Taking advantage of the isolation of local groups through selective infrastructure destruction, a comparatively small landing force can undertake a defeat-in-detail style operation of the planet. That being; If you only have say 100 thousand troops to land, you segment and isolate the enemy so that you fight them in blocks of no more than 5-10 thousand at a time. Better yet, don't fight them at all; destroy their logistical chains with special operations or raiding parties and force them to disband without giving them the chance to fire back at you. Stage 7 is now the long game. Even a single warship in orbit could be all that's necessary. Once the fighting capacity of the local population has been broken, you can invade regional areas one at a time in order of importance. You don't even necessarily *need* to take the whole planet, just the parts of importance to you. If a later diplomatic resolution is attained, this stage might never be necessary, but it should at very least wait until after the food and consumables of nuclear missile submarines and other hostile assets that may still be present have been expended. From here, the process is only limited by the means and goals of subjugation or victory goals of the invaders. A decent fictional depiction of this, though a more rushed equivalent, I think is The Universal Union, or 'The Combine', who took advantage of Earth's ongoing disruption before dividing, conquering, and seeking to control key infrastructure while being largely ambivalent with regards to rural areas and humans outside their aura of influence. 7 Hours to secure a planetary surrender is impressive, though they also had Xen portal storms effectively do the first half of the process for them. Still, I think they at least qualify due to the end result of their invasion, with limited and precise retention of infrastructure and population - though they did land ground forces almost immediately, so it's not a perfect analogue. PS: The Kuwaiti amphibious landings I don't think could be considered a 'ruse' as they were in fact, a plan B. If the land invasion from the West had failed, then it would have gone ahead. Alas, the use of GPS and superiority of American armoured units proved more than effective enough to carry the initial invasion.

  • @mondaysinsanity8193

    @mondaysinsanity8193

    2 жыл бұрын

    The thing is if you dont care what happens to the planet you probably dont care to destroy it

  • @meldighton3802

    @meldighton3802

    2 жыл бұрын

    Based

  • @Sorain1

    @Sorain1

    2 жыл бұрын

    That's a pretty thorough overview for the length you have worked with, I am impressed.

  • @Dr_DoomJazz
    @Dr_DoomJazz4 ай бұрын

    I dont know how i came across your channel. Still pretty new to it and still trying to figure what its all about. But man, really cool stuff. Great production on your videos. This is the type of stuff thats just so easy to have on and playing no matter what it is I am doing. Keep up the great work!

  • @nicholaswong6737
    @nicholaswong67372 жыл бұрын

    I love how you used Yamato 2199 Scenes. Such an underrated Scifi!

  • @SulliMike23
    @SulliMike232 жыл бұрын

    Many factors can go into a planetary invasion and they can also go wrong. But either way, if you want to invade a world the thing you need to do, is eliminate your enemy’s fighting strength or deplete it enough to force them to surrender. But you also need to consider what you need to do once you’ve established a beachhead.

  • @Paerigos
    @Paerigos2 жыл бұрын

    You know. the "prelude" could be skiped by quoting drill instructor fleet sarge Charles Zim... "If you wanted to teach a baby a lesson, would you cut its head off? Of course not. You'd paddle it. There can be circumstances when it's just as foolish to hit an enemy city with an H-bomb as it would be to spank a baby with an axe. War is not violence and killing, pure and simple; war is controlled violence, for a purpose. The purpose of war is to support your government's decisions by force. The purpose is never to kill the enemy just to be killing him...but to make him do what you want him to do. Not killing...but controlled and purposeful violence. But it's not your business or mine to decide the purpose of the control. It's never a soldier's business to decide when or where or how-or why-he fights; that belongs to the statesmen and the generals. The statesmen decide why and how much; the generals take it from there and tell us where and when and how. We supply the violence; other people-'older and wiser heads,' as they say-supply the control. Which is as it should be." SGT Charles Zim

  • @TemplinInstitute

    @TemplinInstitute

    2 жыл бұрын

    damn, I wish I'd thought of that

  • @Paerigos

    @Paerigos

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@TemplinInstitute Well I wasnt that far in the video :D but in fact the movie Zim was quite a good guy... their medics can fix that hand in minutes :D

  • @TemplinInstitute

    @TemplinInstitute

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@Paerigos I really like both Zims

  • @drparadox7833
    @drparadox7833 Жыл бұрын

    This channel is EXACTLY what I wanted

  • @castropanopanopalis
    @castropanopanopalis11 ай бұрын

    Excellent dissertation! Lines up pretty on par with my own project. Orbital landings are defined as Objective Raids, Planetary Assaults, or Planetary Occupations and follow can follow the escalation ladder in order to reach the end goal. Raids to knock out AA and/or Orbital Defenses, neutralize key targets etc. Assaults to land a sizable force in order to achieve a more expansive goal ie seize locations, destroy infrastructure, combat enemy forces or secure a beachhead, etc. Lastly, Occupation would be make use of an existing beachhead to land a substantial force with the intent of engaging in a prolonged operations...

  • @FearlessSon
    @FearlessSon2 жыл бұрын

    Regarding the "demonstration" of a planetary invasion, I could point to Warhammer 40,000: Fire Warrior as an example. In this, the Imperium had abducted a T'au Ethereal, slaughtering any witnesses to the abduction (again, an example of something that can't be done with orbital bombardment alone.) This provoked a military response from the T'au, who sent a retrieval force. The initial T'au strategy here involved two things: first, to convince the Imperials that the T'au were going to commit in force to landing and destroying a few strategically important parts of the planetary infrastructure, and second, to deploy a smaller force elsewhere to locate and recover the Ethereal once the bulk of the Imperial forces were committed to repelling the other attack, which would fall back before their advance. That first operation was a demonstration attack, a feign trying to bait the Imperial defenders into engaging to repel the T'au from establishing a beachhead that the T'au never actually intended to secure, but they had to make it look like that's what they were trying to do for the feign to be successful. So they did actually land forces (and accept that those forces would take some losses) but not enough to imperil their other efforts, and those forces were ordered to fall back when the Imperial resistance became too fierce since that intensity meant the deceptive assault was working.

  • @randomdude2386
    @randomdude23862 жыл бұрын

    In the Lost Fleet book series, a fleet launched an orbital bombardment, but planned it to bounce of the atmosphere, to create streaks in atmosphere, to shock the planet leaders into giving up planet bound prisoners. Would that count as a demonstration? Or something else?

  • @Destroyer_V0

    @Destroyer_V0

    2 жыл бұрын

    Definately some sort of show of force.

  • @someguardsman

    @someguardsman

    2 жыл бұрын

    Threat of force that compelled the enemy to do that they wanted. Sometimes people need to be shown the stinger to imagine what it might feel like to actually get stung.

  • @ryanalving3785

    @ryanalving3785

    2 жыл бұрын

    Hey! A fellow Lost Fleet enjoyer! How are you?

  • @randomdude2386

    @randomdude2386

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@ryanalving3785 good! Didn’t know there were many of us.

  • @grimmech4268

    @grimmech4268

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@randomdude2386 there really aren't I only just finished the last book in the series a few months ago and this is the first time I've ever seen anyone else know of the series

  • @mjk9388
    @mjk93882 жыл бұрын

    Love this series. You have content that I don't see anywhere else on KZread. Also really loved the "Building your Interstellar Navy".

  • @caleblott399
    @caleblott399 Жыл бұрын

    I wish this channel would write a book on this stuff. This stuff is great.

  • @yesinup4116
    @yesinup41162 жыл бұрын

    One day, hundreds of years from now, space combat military academy’s will be using these videos for educational purposes, and that’s weirdly comforting....

  • @Ruzzky_Bly4t

    @Ruzzky_Bly4t

    Жыл бұрын

    They will probably have a great laugh. It's comparable to modern militaries watching a video about military tactics from the 1600s.

  • @argokarrus2731

    @argokarrus2731

    11 ай бұрын

    Very likely this video will be considered more or less like military comedy

  • @paocut9018
    @paocut90182 жыл бұрын

    34:05 I remember an episode of star wars the clone wars where clones where dispatched to send medical supplies and technical aid to civilians in a planet after catastrophic earthquakes. The episode was about R2D2 and C3PO going with them, falling into a cavern, finding out what caused the earth quacks and solving the problems and then none of the clones beleaves them but that isn't the point. If anyone can remember the name of the episode, it could make for a good example of crisis response landings.

  • @robertmind9650

    @robertmind9650

    2 жыл бұрын

    I don’t remember the name but I know what happened right before space Vietnam

  • @tylersoto7465

    @tylersoto7465

    2 жыл бұрын

    I remember and they had to solve a riddle after running into tree looking people in the underground

  • @bluerisk
    @bluerisk2 жыл бұрын

    The successful invasion of major worlds like Tensor, (Foundation) Coruscant (Star Wars), Caprica (Galactica), The Reach (Halo), Earth etc. pp. also depends on ones reputation. These worlds hold an incredible economic and cultural value - to both: the habitants, and those who want to conquer them. If these invasion would mean a regime change only, or even an improvement, the mere threat of an invasion might lead to successful negotiations of surrender. But only if one has this reputation... "We would have all such offenders so cut off: and we give express charge, that in our marches through the country, there be nothing compelled from the villages, nothing taken but paid for, none of the French upbraided or abused in disdainful language; for when lenity and cruelty play for a kingdom, the gentler gamester is the soonest winner." Henry V

  • @bloodysimile4893

    @bloodysimile4893

    Жыл бұрын

    I come across a war document of ww2 over the liberation of France and there discussion about freeing Paris would be a logistics nightmare for the allies since they provide food and supply to it city massive population.

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