Roguevictory wrote:phillies wrote:
After a while, the French Army and the Russian Army did mutiny. At the end of the war, the Austro-Hungarian Army collapsed and started walking home. When the Imperial German navy was sent on a last-time effort against the allied fleets, it mutinied and refused to sail.
True but because a few military forces did such a thing doesn't negate the possibility that a military force might do otherwise. Also I'm all but certain all of the above military forces were in much worse situations than Haven's navy was when the attack on Manticore was launched.
I can't speak about the Russian and Austro-Hundarian cases, but in the case of the High Seas Fleet the men mutinied when they found out that they were being ordered to sea to pick a fight with the Royal Navy's Grand Fleet - a fight in which the German fleet was
expected to be shattered - partly in the hope of inflicting enough damage on the British to improve Germany's at the bargaining table in the peace talks and partly for the honor of the Navy. In addition, this was against the background of nationwide outbreaks of communist and revolutionary movements all aimed at ending the war as soon as possible.
As for the French, the mutinies of 1917 occurred in the aftermath of the Nivelle Offensive, which had promised to end the war in weeks but turned out to be a dismal failure. Coming after the slaughterhouse of Verdun the previous year, the shock to morale was overwhelming. Even then, there were few outbreaks of full-blown mutiny (very few officers killed, for instance). Most units maintained military cohesion and remained in their position, they just refused to undertake any further offensives.
The RHN fleet in Beatrice, by contrast, knew that it was attempting to achieve an outright victory using a plan designed by a C-in-C who they trusted implicitly not to throw their lives away needlessly.