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#1
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Shooting Target ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Validating Posts: 1,618 Joined: 29-January 03 From: Montevideo, Uruguay. Member No.: 3,992 ![]() |
Found this article on today's NYT edition. Given some discussion surrounding SR's UN Peacekeepers, I thought it might be of interest to some.
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Guest_Crimsondude 2.0_* |
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#2
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"Peace through superior firepower."
Good idea. And it's not that I can't see a UN force with teeth, I just think they the US and pre-Haeffner UCAS would have to be out of the picture for it to happen. Likewise the composition of the UNAF removes any diplomatic fiascos that were to result if the UCAS was leading, say, the peacekeeping force in the Yucatán or California. That said, I'm sure that they tried. Actually, that's something I'm curious about. The book states, "The troops that compose the UNAF are loaned primarily by Security Council members: Amazonia, the Czech Republic, France and the UK, with the latter mostly providing intelligence and logistics" (63) with additional support from the Scandinavian Union and New Zealand. But in SoNA they made a big deal about, and began with, the fact that the UCAS is trying to become the world's policeman again and built up its military, and has been trying to get its foot in the door to send observers and peacekeepers to warzones in NA. Whatup then? Why don't they send troops to the UNAF when there are two UN missions in North America, the Balkan Mission is still around, and there's now a Mission in Jerusalem (Because clearly the UCAS has no interests there)? OTOH, I wonder which country's forces comprise the bulk of the UNMIYUP force in the Yucatán... |
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#3
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The King In Yellow ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Dumpshocked Posts: 6,922 Joined: 26-February 05 From: JWD Member No.: 7,121 ![]() |
The UCAS (and CAS) were way too busy licking their wounds and gnarling at the NAN to have any interest in policing the world. With Europe torched and China out of the picture too, only Japan remained. And Japan has always been more pro UN than anti.
And remember, the UCAS is much more like Canada than the US - re the chapters in SOTA2063 about sex, marriage and religion, for instance. That didn't quite sound like the US I know. Besides, wasn't it the CAS that was always painted as the 'true' heir of the US? The UCAS is *trying*, yes. It isn't there yet (and that was one of the bits of SR turning a tad too American for my taste). I would also guess that Tshimshian and Salish or all forces in Claifornia would rather not have White Men running around shooting them again. After the conquest of the West and the concentration camps following SAIM's attacks (which are in SR canon, like it or not), I find it a bit hard to believe that the NAN would not hold a grudge against the UCAS and CAS. |
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#4
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Shooting Target ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 1,978 Joined: 26-February 02 From: New Jersey, USA Member No.: 500 ![]() |
OK...the UCAS is more like Canada than the US?
Why? That makes no sense. Canada (in SR3) was clearly not the dominant partner in the merger. |
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Guest_Crimsondude 2.0_* |
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#5
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Um, there is a cold war between the UCAS and Sioux...
But if they wanted to play the world's policeman, which is what SoNA said, then why aren't they a major contributor to the UNAF? Fuck Tsimshian's feelings, because it's the UN sending troops, not the UCAS. Some of them just happen to come from the UCAS. Like I suggested, you don't think that the Amazonians comprise the largest contingent of forces in the Yucatán? No, Aztlan wouldn't mind that one bit. Oh, and Aztlan is on the Security Council, so it's not like they don't have a voice. There just seems to be a lack of continuity or something. |
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#6
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Moving Target ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 134 Joined: 26-February 02 From: Seattle Member No.: 1,525 ![]() |
Who's the lift power? Aside from Great Britian (and sort-of Russia) only the USA has significant ability to move troops and material across the globe.
It has to be independants from the corps or most of those 30k are all transport and logistics. That, btw brings up a point I'd like to make. I was at first thinking to myself "hey cool, the UN has a static force, probably projection and leadership corps, then multinationals and mercs to fill various missions." Apparently though, if I'm reading this correctly, instead of increasing or decreasing the number of UN soldiers based on how many missions are going on, they now just have a static number that they divide between missions. Otherwise it works pretty much the same as it does today. |
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Guest_Crimsondude 2.0_* |
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#7
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Um... France? Yeah, force projection is a bitch. Reminds me of an argument we had in Foreign Policy about why calls for Europe to carry their own weight were ill-informed. Even if the UCAS has a token carrier fleet, they have supercarriers (note, plural) equivalent to the JIN even so far as to maintain a carrier battle group in the Pacific to protect their interests with regards to Seattle. Even if you halve the number of CVBGs and.... oh, god this is boring. Yeah, let's go with "the latter" referring to France and the UK and not think about it too much, although I'd also go with your idea and some references in that part of the book and say that there are probably a not-insignificant number of mercs and PMCs working for them, providing logistics and infrastructure (Halliburton of the 2060s. Yeah!) and heavy lift transportation. Right off the top of my head, that's probably going to me mercs from MET2000, Knight Errant counterinsurgency and counterintelligence support, Aegis intelligence support, and the UK to provide whatever heavy transport they can. I'm not seeing a lot of Rapid Reaction Force operations in their future, but that's what mercs and shadowrunners are for. |
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#8
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The King In Yellow ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Dumpshocked Posts: 6,922 Joined: 26-February 05 From: JWD Member No.: 7,121 ![]() |
Exactly my point. But check out SOTA2063's parts on sex and marriage and all that. Secularised marriage, in the country that wants to put the christian religious definition into the constitution. That's a tad bit too much of a change for 60 years, I'm afraid. Not without some foreign power forcing them to change that way, and I wouldn't know who could do that.
Because the UN is controlled by evil Indians and Asians? Because the US (and thus, presumably, it's successors) has always had a huge problem with submitting troops to others' command? Or mabe just plain old isolationism, and the talk about resuming an active role in international peacekeeping was just drumbeating to distract the public's attention from internal problems the politicans cannot handle. There's certainly no shortage of these in the UCAS.
You forgot France, as CD said. And that is today. In a fantasy world set some 60 years in a fictional future? Come on. There isn't even a US around to intervene anywhwere The countries we know have been mostly broken up. Japan has changed to become a global superpower, operating several nuclear powered, Nimitz-type aircraft carriers (R3), maintains two colonies (Cyberpirates, Target: Smuggler Havens, SoNA), and has intervened in several countries (SoA reportedly covers the end of the Japanese mandate in Peru, for instance). It has to have some sort of lifting capacity. Same with Aztlan, and possibly, Amazonia (sort of; I'd guess they'd rely on spirits and magic to move troops rather than aeroplanes and ships). And don't forget the megacorps, who apparently operate expensive equipment such as stealth bombers (Ares, in Aztlan), orbital battlestations and weaponry (Ares, Aztech and SK, corporate shadowfiles), and standing armies, including the logistics to maintain overseas presence. And of course, there's Proteus, who are operating mobile arcologies and space stations and whatnot. As for the UN .... states like Germany already like to rent transport capacity from Russia and Ukraine for missions in Afghanistan where the crap C-160s they operate cannot fly by themselves (or even charter airliners to get troops to some sort of forward base in safe territory - like Uzbekistan - and fly them in in their little transport planes from there). I see no reason why the UN cannot work like this, too. And, of course, I guess that megacorps interested in whatever mission the UN would gladly offer help in logistics, too. |
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Guest_Crimsondude 2.0_* |
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#9
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In a country where a group of people want to ...
Well, can we at least distinguish between the RL U.S. and a fictional country for these purposes? Moreover, let's stick with what's actually in the books.
I added France as a 'maybe' not a definite. Like I said above, let's stick with SR. Let's also stick with what's in the book. I didn't omit anything important about the military capabilities except that they use a lot of drones to compensate for their limited size, and if Japan or Aztlan aren't mentioned in the book as even making a contribution worth noting I see no reason to assume that they are helping out. What I do see is that they use mercs and runners and drones in addition to their 30,000 soldiers. Taken all together, the UK and maybe France (as is the imprecise language in such as sentence as the one I quoted) and the others could collectively provide heavy transport from either Berne or the, "roughly two dozen UN monitoring and observation missions" (63) the UN maintains around the world. They could also contract out to a mercenary company like MET2000 if necessary. Everything from here on though is pure speculation.
While the UN is a tool of the Corporate Court, the UNAF also operated against corporations during the Corp War and is often used as a pawn between the corps through certain legal powers in the UN. Likewise, as noted in the text, most of the countries who contribute corps aren't on good terms (and vice versa) with the corps.
Maybe. Consider this, how did the UN get a mission established in the Yucatán? |
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#10
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The King In Yellow ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Dumpshocked Posts: 6,922 Joined: 26-February 05 From: JWD Member No.: 7,121 ![]() |
Does Aztlan have a veto? If not, the Greenies and the western block (and possibly, Japan) could simply vote it through anyway. Or Aztlan decided to seek a peaceful solution and to let the UN take over after they got their asses thoroughly kicked by that spirit stampede following their slash-and-burn operation in YotC. After all, that seems to have been quite the painful lesson to the Azzies.
They can project force without relying on external help for logistics. Not on the scale the US can, but they have the logistics. All I'm saying.
Well, okay, but that group doesn't call itself 'moral majority' for nothing. They have the control over all branches of government (or will have if they cut down on filibustering), and have a 50%+ mandate for their plans from the population (and, according to polls, some 70% of the populace support that speciific plan). That's a a group of people alright. A rather large group, though. Hence my generalisation. But I'll make sure to mention the minority opposition next time I talk about it. :)
The UCAS is no friend of Amazonia. The UCAS certainly hates the NAN's guts (and vice versa). Hence, I cannot see why the UCAS would want to put their troops under the former's command to help the latter get along. |
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#11
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Moving Target ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 193 Joined: 26-February 02 From: East Jerusalem Member No.: 2,022 ![]() |
Pretty much. UCAS is not supposed to be "out of the picture". But until now they didn't have much interest in joining peacekeeping ops - except in California, and as you know California only became a real issue in '62. You can assume the California mission is pretty recent. Yucatan is not really relevant. This has far more to do with the CAS than the UCAS. Between Yucatàn and the UCAS, there is Aztlan, NANs and CAS. Once again, the UCAS cannot and is not the US anymore and the US Latin American foreign policy cannot be the same.
Trying, possibly. There are still troops on the Sioux border, probably close to Denver, and on the CAS border. This doesn't mean UCAS troops are excluded from UN missions, just that they're not the major providers of troops. There are probably some UCASers in Yucatàn... but what's the point of sending troops when you can take part in the political decisions without sending your own troopers on the field ? On the other hand, I'd easily see multi or bilateral *non-UN* peacekeeping ops all across NorAm (Pueblo, Florida, AMC, Tsimshian-Salish) have UCAS troops in their roster.
I'm not sure what you mean. The UCAS sure has an interest in California, less so in Yucatàn... what do you mean with the two others ?
Left open for the GM to decide. Could be Amazonia pushing it through (as there are no veto rights anymore), or even Azania. You'll also note this is clearly mentioned as *not an intervention yet* (check the GI for details on the various missions' denominations), meaning there isn't a big amount of troops on the groud yet, if any. |
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#12
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Canon Companion ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 8,021 Joined: 2-March 03 From: The Morgue, Singapore LTG Member No.: 4,187 ![]() |
Most people would be content with 2 or 3 identical posts, Hermit. You had to do it 7 times... :(
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#13
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Moving Target ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 193 Joined: 26-February 02 From: East Jerusalem Member No.: 2,022 ![]() |
Because for now they have neither the means nor the power to trigger UN ops they're involved in that would answer their current strategic worries. Okay, the UCAS wants to play global cop again. But first they should get things right on their continent before starting to look after others. What they very well do in California but no elsewhere in NorAm yet, assuming UN-backed actions is what they want there. Personally I'd rather see them trying to build local multilateral agreements to solve the situation at a regional/continental scale, rather than involving a global-scale, corp-dependent org like the UN.
A voice but no veto right. See the composition of the SecCouncil and it'll make sense.
Maybe if you can have a clearer idea it'll be easier to explain. |
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#14
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The King In Yellow ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Dumpshocked Posts: 6,922 Joined: 26-February 05 From: JWD Member No.: 7,121 ![]() |
Toturi: :(
I didn't do that on purpose ... |
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#15
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Moving Target ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 193 Joined: 26-February 02 From: East Jerusalem Member No.: 2,022 ![]() |
All the assumptions above are correct. The thing is that Japan (considering its SR history) and Aztlan would be pretty ugly and terrible peacekeepers (even though this might ne bound to change for Japan). UK and France weren't hit hard by the Euro-Wars: the first almost took no part in it, the second saw no fights taking place on itd territory, and you can assume that the French didn't send much of their troops to get butchered in the Balkans. The two reasons why they are not major providers of troops for UN missions is that 1) they no longer have global diplomatic ambitions and 2) they have to support Europe's EuroForce as their primary concern. They *do* however still have supply and lift and intel gathering capabilities they punctually lend to the UN. As for all the "behind-the-scenes" stuff (transport, supplies, etc., you can assume merc outfits are prime contractors - the thing is in most cases the UN wants to have Blue Helmets rather than mercs on the field under exciting media coverage, and if possible showing off they have weapons and no scruples to use them.
Still a corp tool.
And that's why it's a "fuck-you" game. The corps are satisfied 'cause they think they can keep the provider countries in check and manipulate their militaries however anti-corps those countries are, while the countries think they score points on showing off their military capabilities the corps obviously lack.
Once again, left open. Could be that Amazonia pushed it through. Could be that corps want to prey on Aztech's weaknesses. Could be both. You decide. |
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#16
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Moving Target ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 193 Joined: 26-February 02 From: East Jerusalem Member No.: 2,022 ![]() |
No. |
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Guest_Crimsondude 2.0_* |
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#17
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Who said the UNAF commander was Amazonian? |
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#18
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Moving Target ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 193 Joined: 26-February 02 From: East Jerusalem Member No.: 2,022 ![]() |
Nobody. He's Czech. But the *mission's* commander usually comes from the country providing the main bulk of forces. |
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Guest_Crimsondude 2.0_* |
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#19
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I'm going to let you tell the story then, since I don't particularly feel like revealing everything about this book just yet.
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#20
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Moving Target ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 193 Joined: 26-February 02 From: East Jerusalem Member No.: 2,022 ![]() |
Really... :D You try to point out why the stuff is coherent, otherwise you get bad reviews and unapropriate critics, and then people tell you you spill the beans. :grinbig: |
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#21
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Running Target ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 1,011 Joined: 15-February 05 From: Montréal, QC, Canada Member No.: 7,087 ![]() |
Don't blame it all on Canada (With the South Park song playing in the background). Sure, Canada is more liberal than the US. Especially Ontario and that's the bulk of the territory that joins the UCAS. But we're not the only ones on the continent. Hasn't the state of Vermont legalized gay marriage, for example? I'm looking at the map of UCAS right now. Now this might be naive and ill informed, but aren't the parts of the US that constitute UCAS more liberal than the US as a whole? All the south is gone and so are the rockies. |
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Guest_Crimsondude 2.0_* |
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#22
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And this all has what to do with anything?
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#23
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Shooting Target ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 1,978 Joined: 26-February 02 From: New Jersey, USA Member No.: 500 ![]() |
Ya don't think the population might have moved, Charon?
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#24
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Moving Target ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 134 Joined: 26-February 02 From: Seattle Member No.: 1,525 ![]() |
I would think the UN "having a force" would have been pushed through with the goal of simplifying the command structure, flattening the org chart, and generating a consistancy of command and structure in their various operations.
As it appears in the book (to me) it looks like the only thing that has changed really is that now they have at least 30k troops ready to move under UN command, instead of having to ask for donations on a per-mission basis. Now this simplifies the mission ratification somewhat, but if the dedicated soldiers and their commanders object to a ratified mission you're still going to need to request soldiers from another country. It still seems the UN force will take months to get to even situations that are fairly obvious they should be involved it. |
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#25
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Running Target ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 1,011 Joined: 15-February 05 From: Montréal, QC, Canada Member No.: 7,087 ![]() |
The south, no. The west, not all of them and not all into UCAS. |
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