It's rather a reach to paint Tomed as a defeat for anybody. All we know of it is that it cost a lot of lives and led the a treaty that forebade cloaking tech to the Federation. For all we know it was a Federation victory and they were only too happy to surrender cloaking tech. That wouldn't actually surprise me, given how often cloaks lead directly to defeat for the forces using them. Or they may have ceded it in return for who knows what advantages in other areas
I don't see how it's a "reach" to call Tomed a defeat. We know precisely nothing of the incident except for this: the Federation gave up a strategic technology.
While it's
possible that the Federation forced the Romulans to make concessions for them, there was never any mention of them.
And while it's also possible the Federation gave up cloaking tech of their own free will, it's hard to see them signing a treaty that would forbid them from making
any research
at all into that area of technology.
They've defeated the Borg again and again
They've defeated the Borg a grand total of twice, destroying two ships (I don't count VOY's losses in this, since the situation there was all over the place).
and have almost always done it, incidentally, not through luck as you claim but through some scientific quirk or weakness they have found, rather than brute strength. Given the track record, a fleet of battleships is the very last thing you'd attack the Borg with
The Cube in FC was heavily damaged by the Federation fleet, and later destroyed when someone had the brains to concentrate the entire fleet's fire on one area. This shows quite clearly that brute force
isn't a non-issue when dealing with the Borg. The Borg can only adapt to so much firepower at once.
I'm not talking about individual actions as such, though I quibble with some that have been labelled as defeats. But you can't judge a system on the outcome of any one action.
Except we're not judging it one any one action, we're judging it on pretty much all actions.
If you did, then to use your example we would say that maintaining a military fleet was a stupid idea since one was defeated at Pearl.
What? I never said a defeat invalidated the use of a military force. I said that if a force continously suffers defeats that could have been avoided, or gains victory only through the needless sacrafice of many more troops than would otherwise have been needed, then there might be a point to looking into modifying the military force in question to make it more effective.
What matters, in my view, is long term success. The Federation system works, over the long term. That's really the only criteria that matters, and in my view it's shortsighted in the extreme to simply dismiss it as stupid
During WW2, the Soviet Union suffered more than ten million casualties among its armed forces when fighting against the Nazis. The Nazis lost less than half that amount, despite fighting against Britain and the USA on numerous fronts and eventualy getting invaded and carved up by the victors.
Now, the Soviet Union eventualy won, but suffered needlessly heavy losses in doing so. Now, looking at those numers, would you honestly say that there was no need to look into upgrading the army, merely because they won?
While it may be foolish to dismiss an organisation as useless for suffering a few defeats, it is equaly foolish to dismiss massive
avoidable casualties merely because the organisation in question was ultimately succesful.
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