Executive Offices, Hall of the Congress of the Terran Hegemony
Geneva, Europe
Terra
November 1, 2780
David Callaghan swallowed the whiskey in one gulp and he sat down the crystal glass on a serving table. “I had no idea your casualties have been so high. Two thirds of the Defense Force . . . gone. My god.”
“It is worse than that, Mister President. Technically I have almost one hundred and forty divisions left . . . but not a single unit has an effective strength of more than sixty percent. Not one. And that is after I issued the order to disband twenty-five divisions this morning that were reporting only twenty percent or less effectives and allowed for the distribution of their personnel and equipment among the rest.”
Aaron sipped his own dark amber lager and shook his head. “The Fleet is in tatters. Every ship needs repair and refit time—we have pushed them hard these past twelve years. And even including what my people say we can salvage from the wrecks in system, we are looking at around forty hundred and fifty WarShips total. Isn’t that correct, Admiral?”
“It is, General DeChavilier,” the red-haired, clean-shaven man in the dress uniform of a Star League Admiral answered.
“And you still haven’t introduced this officer to me . . . forgive me for not knowing your name already, but I have been out of communication for a rather long while,” David continued.
Aaron snorted. “This young, bright-eyed, and bushy-tailed officer is why I want you to change that broadcast you making tonight, Mister President. May I introduce to you, Admiral Stephen McKenna of the Star League Defense Force.”
“Ah,” David said as he sat back in his chair. “Now I see the resemblance—and I know of you, Admiral. It is my understanding that Aleksandyr thought highly of you as well.”
“Thank you, Mister President,” Stephen answered softly. “I like to think that he did.”
“So,” the President of the Hegemony Congress said to Aaron, “you think he is up for a job you don’t want?”
“David . . . I’ve got my hands full keeping the SLDF in one piece. A good number of our people are tired and just want to go home—and there have been offers made to several units to defect to the Member States.” Aaron held up one hand as the politician sat up suddenly. “No one has taken them up yet, but I have to discharge those people whose service is up and let these volunteers go home; we cannot simply keep them in chains. And if I stand for election, then I must resign my commission . . . and God only knows what will happen to the SLDF and the Hegemony worlds whent he Council appoints my replacement.”
He paused and took another sip of the thick beer, smacking his lips appreciatively at the taste. “Now, Stephen here knows politics—military politics, at the least—and he plays that game far better than me. And he has the connotations associated with his name, plus my public endorsement . . . as a private citizen, of course, not the Commanding General of the SLDF. And he is loyal to the core, David. He knows what the stakes are and he is willing to put aside his career to fill this slot.”
“You people, you are talking about becoming the ruler of the entire Hegemony! And you make it sound like a prison sentence!”
“Because it is, Mister President,” Stephen McKenna answered. “I agree with you and the Commanding General that we have to have a strong Hegemony in order to stop the Great Houses from seizing and raping your—our—worlds. But frankly, I’d rather be on a flag bridge blowing the hell out of their Fleets. I don’t want the job anymore than General DeChavilier does—but I realize that someone has to do it in order to have a chance of preserving the League.”
David smiled and he poured a bit more whiskey in his glass. “The Council Lords will go ape when they find out what we have planned, gentlemen. And by the letter of the law, THEY are in charge of the SLDF without a First Lord. Hell, they don’t even have to seat a Director-General on the Council—that seat was promised to a Cameron in perpetuity.”
Aaron grinned. “If they try to issue orders, they will discover that there is technical authority and real authority; the difference between the two in real life being quite substantial. The vast majority of the SLDF will obey my orders over that of a political appointee from one of the member states.”
“I hope you are right,” David said as he took another sip. “How do you plan on getting the boys in green back to full-strength? The treasury is bare, none of the member states are paying their SLDF dues, every one of our worlds is having to pick the pieces of the Occupation . . . all of our factories are off-line and will take time to restore. If, that is, we can find the funds.”
The Acting Commanding General of the SLDF sighed and he sat forward. “Starting tomorrow, we are beginning a consolidation of units. My staff and I have selected seventy divisional HQs and nearly fifty independent regiments. Over the next year, every other unit still in existence as of today will case their colors and have their personnel and equipment reassigned to one of those new core formations. By this time next year, we may only have those seventy divisions and fifty regiments—that is after we discharge soldiers who want to go home, by the way—but each one of those formations will be at or above full strength. In both personnel and equipment. That will give us a three-to-on advantage over either Kurita or Davion; hell, we would boast equal numbers to Kurita, Davion, Marik, and Steiner.”
“The Fleet,” added Stephen McKenna, “will be putting the ships most fit for duty into newly formed task groups, while the rest get their much-needed overhauls and repairs. We should be able to keep one hundred and twenty—maybe one fifty—WarShips in service for the next twelve months, and that will only grow as the ships exit the repair berths and return to active service. Within four years—perhaps five—we will be able to deploy all four hundred and fifty-four . . . and with that force, I can guarantee NONE of the House Lords will challenge the SLDF. That number might shrink, because some of those salvaged ships are very old vessels from the reserve—Monsoons, Barons, Carsons, and Nagas among others.” And Stephen paused for a moment, looking at the floor before he raised his head defiantly. “And I think we need to start planning ahead to restore the HAF.”
“The Hegemony Armed Forces? The Council Lords will go utterly ballistic!” the President yelped, and even Aaron winced.
Stephen nodded. “True. But what happened with Amaris was in large part because the SLDF has become a force for the Star League as a whole; they weren't here to keep the people of the Hegemony safe while the SLDF went about carrying out the orders of the First Lord—when we rebuild the Hegemony, we must also reestablish the Hegemony Armed Forces to be on the same ground as the other Member States. And to prevent such a tragedy from ever occuring again.”
“That will be neither cheap nor quick, Admiral McKenna,” the President answered, and then he cocked an eyebrow. “Unless the Commanding General were willing to release the Royals, that is?”
“He is NOT so willing,” Aaron said acidly. “And with the shortages in equipment and personnel, a lot of the Royal formations are not so Royal anymore. Still . . .,” he stopped and thought for a moment, “we might be able to persuade some of our retiring folks to rejoin a new HAF . . . and the Rim Worlds forces left plenty of salvage on the Hegemony worlds and Terra for you to pick through. At least until the factories get up and running again. There might even be some old planetary militia armories that haven’t been touched—I will order a general survey to see what equipment still exists; it won’t be the newest or the best, but I’ll make certain it works.”
“Good,” answered David. “Very well, then. Admiral McKenna, I hereby officially ask if you are willing to make yourself a candidate for the office of Director-General of the Terran Hegemony?”
“I am,” answered Stephen. “And, as such, I hereby offer my resignation to General DeChavilier.”
“Accepted,” Aaron growled. “But regretfully. And thankfully at the same time, considering it could have been me,” he finished with a grin. “And just think, gentlemen, by this time tomorrow, Kenyon Marik and Minoru Kurita might just have had a stroke!”
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