That may be 100% true, but I'm not disputing that Burnham was an idiot and a terrible officer. I'm only disputing that she's to blame for the war.technobabbler wrote: Burnham has been written as bipolar and/or with ADHD and/or PTSD and/or too loose with the chain of command. An unsympathetic protaganist.
T'Kuvma came there with the explicit intention of starting a war with the humans. He sent the Torchbearer out to intercept Burnham. Had she done a flyby, he would've sent him to intercept her during the flyby instead. Had the Shenzhou flown in closer itself of sending in a single individual, T'Kuvma would've decloaked and/or opened fire immediately and/or sent the Torchbearer to be martyred by getting smeared across the Shenzhou's windshield. There was literally nothing the Shenzhou could've done to prevent war except for turning around and going home. And since they had no idea T'Kuvma was even there, you can't blame them for that.technobabbler wrote:1. Captain explicitly said "just a fly by" to investigate that artifact. Burham replies, "just a fly by." If Burnham followed orders and gave the artifact a wide berth she would not have killed the Torchbearer. (arguably)
Even if this were true, the Klingons didn't respond to it in any way, so it clearly didn't start the war. And it isn't true - they already put a weapons lock on the Klingon vessel far earlier in the episode, to get them to answer their hail. This action was worthy of a court martial but was not responsible for starting the war.technobabbler wrote:2. Admiral says in his conference call to the Captain and Burnham, "do nothing" until Europa and the fleet arrives.
Burnham mutinies orders "target phasers." so the Klingon vessel knows it's lit up while Michelle Yeoh is knocked out w/the nerve pinch. (arguably the order might not have been carried out---but there was no dialogue to be definitive)
The war started long before this, so it couldn't possibly have caused the war. You can argue that Burnham failed to end the war, but that's not quite the same thing as blaming her for starting it. Plus, she was just guessing about what the different outcomes would be of the kidnap/kill/leave alone decision, and she might have been wrong; this sort of might-have-been-ing is impossible to prove or disprove.technobabbler wrote:3. Burnham: Captain we can't kill Tkuvma, it would make him a martyr. Let's board to kidnap him to make Tkuvma look weak. Away team boards the ship, but instead of stunning Tkuvma, Burnham shoots him in the back and kills him out of rage. What about the plan?
Finally, when she's alone on the Klingon ship it's not really fair to second-guess choices she made in the heat of the moment, especially since it's likely she would no longer have succeeded in kidnapping him without a second person to provide cover. We can say she made the decision emotionally and that's unacceptable, but that doesn't mean that if she sat there and reasoned logically she wouldn't have come to the same conclusion: that kidnapping him was no longer possible (because she doesn't know how many other Klingons might show up while she's trying to hail the Discovery and beam out without somebody else to fire on them and keep them at bay) and that, once that option is eliminated, on balance it's better to kill him than leave him alive and in command.
We can blame the Shenzhou for not sending over sixteen trained security officers instead of the Captain and First Officer, but then that's been a Starfleet tradition since time immemorial.