Atlantica
Northern Ice Flow
On approach to the Charophyte Oasis
The hallways of the ship were taken up by drones moving equipment around as the “Test Model 2” cut through the cold waters in the North of Atlantica. It was one of the few ships that the Magnetic Assembly had taken at the start of the war that had survived the duration of the war on Atlantica, having survived the Statesmen prowling overhead by hiding from their prying eyes.
Moving to the northern ice-flows of Atlantica was a move to keep the ship intact. There were fewer satellites dedicated to tracking here, and unlike the more populated equator, it was far more costly to place ships in polar orbits where their path would let them continually revisit.
Even so, the ship’s surface to orbit laser seemed to always have something to shoot at.
Ahead of the ship was the Charophyte Oasis, an island that was mostly covered in a primitive moss. A similarly sprawling city was developing on the shore, spreading both into the island with dense greenhouses and out into the ocean with older ships having been lashed together to create a floating habitat that lacked the intentionality of the prefabricated artificial islands that humans inhabited.
“This is your operation,” Somna reminded Geiben, “Hearts and Minds… We have many that our sympathetic to our cause within the Charophyte Oasis, and we should be able to keep the ship hidden there. If a Statesmen adjusts orbit to be overhead, we’ll at least have some warning to move the ship before they reach a strike position… Not that the American Union is popular here. This place is a dumping ground for excess population. High unemployment. The only real exports are plant-based and that relies on cheap labor, which in turn relies on no one drawing too much attention from the Authorities that might have rules against such things. Not that any of these people should be here in the first place. The entire Northern ice flows are owned by Atlantica Petrochem… water, land, resource extraction rights, the whole nine. Normal policy would be to establish patrols in the area, and secure relationships with local leaders… but we don’t have the boots on the ground for a traditional campaign here.”
Geiben was dressed in a puffy winter coat, a hand terminal in one hand and a mug of coffee in the other as he read over the notes on the local demographics and economic situation. “We’ll need some real solutions for the people here. I bet that they’ve been hearing administrations promising fixes to their plight for decades now. They don’t have trust for American politicians, they’ll have even less trust for robots. What can we offer them?”
“We have a surface to orbit laser system, 20 land attack missiles, another 20 configured for multi-mission use, about 5000 cannon rounds, 4 short range spotter drones, another 4 small USVs, 8 bad dog drones. There are other Assembly forces on the planet that are being shuffled around to avoid attacks from orbit as well as those that are sympathetic to the Assembly…” Somnya would continue to explain what they can offer in the way that a soldier would. The world was viewed through security concerns. There were the legitimate institutions of the area, the Planter's Association, Atlantica Petrochem, the Atlantica Colonial Administration… there were those that were less reputable such as Cold Shoulder… Then there was the ever present threat of those committing crimes or unrest. The American Union’s presence was framed as the actions of an enemy nation… Though against the statesmen in orbit their small ship could only hope for deterrence. “The American Union is still the major player on the planet, but not the major force locally. Militarily, the one currently with the largest force is the Planter's Association. They operate a rather large police force, not just for protecting the greenhouses, they also use it to police the population centers. Atlantica Petrochem is quite a bit larger though, if they wanted to they could pay for the kind of security force needed to control this whole area. They have the legal authority to do so under their contracts with the American Union too so it’s in the Association’s best interest to not rock their boat. The Association is also reliant on fertilizers produced by Atlantica Petrochem, and genetic IP from their associated corp Nature-clear. Their main security concerns are with Cold Shoulder, a loose association of criminal cartels that are destroying the local plant life to illegally farm their own crops on the island. They also tend to spread out into other activities, theft, gun-running, that kind of thing. If we want to position ourselves as a proper security partner then leveraging the Assembly’s expertise to provide wide area surveillance and counterinsurgency would be our best move. The Assembly can fuse data together and form conclusions faster than any of the other players. At the moment we also have the fastest and most heavily armed boat.”
Images of their island hiding spot were being shown on the table infront of them. The curved island was like a small mountain, covered in a thick green moss. The Greenhoues and professional looking workspaces of the Planter’s Association were eating into the natural moss of the terrain, with some nicer living spaces closer to the coast. The safe inner coast areas quickly devolved into a patchwork of piers and lashed together ships that housed an increasingly poorer population, often of people displayed or fired from jobs elsewhere on the planet that had ended up here.
Geiben nodded along. This all made sense to him as a fellow officer. Security, and power projection, were ultimately how they were going to stake their rule in the area. But it was cold. Cold, and unsustainable.
“We’d just be another warmonger if security is all we can offer.” Geiben replied. “It won’t change the reality of these people if we just brought a larger cannon. We’d just be a replacement for the Planter’s Association. How can we help these people socioeconomically? If we simply put a boot down on the unrest we wouldn’t be solving the core problems.”
Somnya would give him that look… the same look she’d been giving everybody for the past year or so but in this specific case it was more of a ‘We are another warmonger’ look. It was a sentiment that she considered herself too professional to express. Instead she would focus on ways to enable Geiben’s request.
“If the goal is to increase prosperity in the area, we would need to increase the value of this area, and ensure the local leadership invests in their workforce. Our Kinetic options would be to remove the Cartels from the area. Alternatively I’m sure there is technology we could offer. We would be threatening relationships between suppliers, but the Assembly isn’t looking to make a profit here. We could also look at making inroads into local leadership… the normal path in is appealing to them through Money, Pride, or Blackmail. The Planter’s group are all single-owner operations but Atlantica Petrochem is operated by a board where flipping a few members would be sufficient.”
There was a brief pause as another plan was formulated,
“We could also remove middle-men. Atlantica Petrochem does own this territory, and the Planter’s Association is essentially squatting. Delivering the agriculture operations to AP would earn us influence.”
Geiben mused. “If we want to really install our presence here, we’ll have to appeal to the grassroots. I think we can do better than placate some corporate types.” He stood at the bow of the bridge, looking out at the moss covered island. He swiped across his hand terminal more, searching for descriptions of the local demographics, then gave up and shoved it in his pocket. “We’ll need to get boots on the ground to really know these people. Let’s get armed and head out.”
“It’ll take time to run a security profile for the area, and we do not have the numbers to ensure our own safety on the ground. If we want to go in we would be reliant on our local partners for security,” Somnya reminded him, not liking the idea of walking around if the words ‘in force’ weren’t included somewhere.
“Don’t draw attention to yourselves.” Mari said, using the spears in the table to make her voice heard. The small ‘thump thump thump’ of her smaller drones could be heard in the nearby hallway. As she continued to explain herself, the drones would start assembling themselves into her more normal form, the humanoid shape hidden within a dark purple robe and hood, “I will get clothing for you that fits in with what the locals wear, and is treated for disrupting electronic surveillance. Also leave your devices here, fresh Cells will be provided for you that are untraceable.”
Northern Ice Flow
On approach to the Charophyte Oasis
The hallways of the ship were taken up by drones moving equipment around as the “Test Model 2” cut through the cold waters in the North of Atlantica. It was one of the few ships that the Magnetic Assembly had taken at the start of the war that had survived the duration of the war on Atlantica, having survived the Statesmen prowling overhead by hiding from their prying eyes.
Moving to the northern ice-flows of Atlantica was a move to keep the ship intact. There were fewer satellites dedicated to tracking here, and unlike the more populated equator, it was far more costly to place ships in polar orbits where their path would let them continually revisit.
Even so, the ship’s surface to orbit laser seemed to always have something to shoot at.
Ahead of the ship was the Charophyte Oasis, an island that was mostly covered in a primitive moss. A similarly sprawling city was developing on the shore, spreading both into the island with dense greenhouses and out into the ocean with older ships having been lashed together to create a floating habitat that lacked the intentionality of the prefabricated artificial islands that humans inhabited.
“This is your operation,” Somna reminded Geiben, “Hearts and Minds… We have many that our sympathetic to our cause within the Charophyte Oasis, and we should be able to keep the ship hidden there. If a Statesmen adjusts orbit to be overhead, we’ll at least have some warning to move the ship before they reach a strike position… Not that the American Union is popular here. This place is a dumping ground for excess population. High unemployment. The only real exports are plant-based and that relies on cheap labor, which in turn relies on no one drawing too much attention from the Authorities that might have rules against such things. Not that any of these people should be here in the first place. The entire Northern ice flows are owned by Atlantica Petrochem… water, land, resource extraction rights, the whole nine. Normal policy would be to establish patrols in the area, and secure relationships with local leaders… but we don’t have the boots on the ground for a traditional campaign here.”
Geiben was dressed in a puffy winter coat, a hand terminal in one hand and a mug of coffee in the other as he read over the notes on the local demographics and economic situation. “We’ll need some real solutions for the people here. I bet that they’ve been hearing administrations promising fixes to their plight for decades now. They don’t have trust for American politicians, they’ll have even less trust for robots. What can we offer them?”
“We have a surface to orbit laser system, 20 land attack missiles, another 20 configured for multi-mission use, about 5000 cannon rounds, 4 short range spotter drones, another 4 small USVs, 8 bad dog drones. There are other Assembly forces on the planet that are being shuffled around to avoid attacks from orbit as well as those that are sympathetic to the Assembly…” Somnya would continue to explain what they can offer in the way that a soldier would. The world was viewed through security concerns. There were the legitimate institutions of the area, the Planter's Association, Atlantica Petrochem, the Atlantica Colonial Administration… there were those that were less reputable such as Cold Shoulder… Then there was the ever present threat of those committing crimes or unrest. The American Union’s presence was framed as the actions of an enemy nation… Though against the statesmen in orbit their small ship could only hope for deterrence. “The American Union is still the major player on the planet, but not the major force locally. Militarily, the one currently with the largest force is the Planter's Association. They operate a rather large police force, not just for protecting the greenhouses, they also use it to police the population centers. Atlantica Petrochem is quite a bit larger though, if they wanted to they could pay for the kind of security force needed to control this whole area. They have the legal authority to do so under their contracts with the American Union too so it’s in the Association’s best interest to not rock their boat. The Association is also reliant on fertilizers produced by Atlantica Petrochem, and genetic IP from their associated corp Nature-clear. Their main security concerns are with Cold Shoulder, a loose association of criminal cartels that are destroying the local plant life to illegally farm their own crops on the island. They also tend to spread out into other activities, theft, gun-running, that kind of thing. If we want to position ourselves as a proper security partner then leveraging the Assembly’s expertise to provide wide area surveillance and counterinsurgency would be our best move. The Assembly can fuse data together and form conclusions faster than any of the other players. At the moment we also have the fastest and most heavily armed boat.”
Images of their island hiding spot were being shown on the table infront of them. The curved island was like a small mountain, covered in a thick green moss. The Greenhoues and professional looking workspaces of the Planter’s Association were eating into the natural moss of the terrain, with some nicer living spaces closer to the coast. The safe inner coast areas quickly devolved into a patchwork of piers and lashed together ships that housed an increasingly poorer population, often of people displayed or fired from jobs elsewhere on the planet that had ended up here.
Geiben nodded along. This all made sense to him as a fellow officer. Security, and power projection, were ultimately how they were going to stake their rule in the area. But it was cold. Cold, and unsustainable.
“We’d just be another warmonger if security is all we can offer.” Geiben replied. “It won’t change the reality of these people if we just brought a larger cannon. We’d just be a replacement for the Planter’s Association. How can we help these people socioeconomically? If we simply put a boot down on the unrest we wouldn’t be solving the core problems.”
Somnya would give him that look… the same look she’d been giving everybody for the past year or so but in this specific case it was more of a ‘We are another warmonger’ look. It was a sentiment that she considered herself too professional to express. Instead she would focus on ways to enable Geiben’s request.
“If the goal is to increase prosperity in the area, we would need to increase the value of this area, and ensure the local leadership invests in their workforce. Our Kinetic options would be to remove the Cartels from the area. Alternatively I’m sure there is technology we could offer. We would be threatening relationships between suppliers, but the Assembly isn’t looking to make a profit here. We could also look at making inroads into local leadership… the normal path in is appealing to them through Money, Pride, or Blackmail. The Planter’s group are all single-owner operations but Atlantica Petrochem is operated by a board where flipping a few members would be sufficient.”
There was a brief pause as another plan was formulated,
“We could also remove middle-men. Atlantica Petrochem does own this territory, and the Planter’s Association is essentially squatting. Delivering the agriculture operations to AP would earn us influence.”
Geiben mused. “If we want to really install our presence here, we’ll have to appeal to the grassroots. I think we can do better than placate some corporate types.” He stood at the bow of the bridge, looking out at the moss covered island. He swiped across his hand terminal more, searching for descriptions of the local demographics, then gave up and shoved it in his pocket. “We’ll need to get boots on the ground to really know these people. Let’s get armed and head out.”
“It’ll take time to run a security profile for the area, and we do not have the numbers to ensure our own safety on the ground. If we want to go in we would be reliant on our local partners for security,” Somnya reminded him, not liking the idea of walking around if the words ‘in force’ weren’t included somewhere.
“Don’t draw attention to yourselves.” Mari said, using the spears in the table to make her voice heard. The small ‘thump thump thump’ of her smaller drones could be heard in the nearby hallway. As she continued to explain herself, the drones would start assembling themselves into her more normal form, the humanoid shape hidden within a dark purple robe and hood, “I will get clothing for you that fits in with what the locals wear, and is treated for disrupting electronic surveillance. Also leave your devices here, fresh Cells will be provided for you that are untraceable.”