I can subscribe to that. If the Federation ever gets into the mindset of a total war, then things would get ugly for everyone who's not a friend. Think about Japan and the US in World War 2. The Japs seemed like a foe that could really win a traditional war at face value (seen relative from the point in time), but they simply couldn't and their one mistake was, to give the US a reason to actually stop half-assing things. It ended with the Japanese being essentially a satellite-state by grace of the most powerful nation on Earth since... ever (at that point in time).CrypticMirror wrote: ↑Sun Jun 28, 2020 6:02 pmThe way I look at it, the Federation has a lot of people but not a lot of citizens want to fight or -given that most of the founder worlds have been through massive global holocausts in their past- are even that much in favour of standing armies. The various Empires have smaller numbers of worlds to draw on, but those populations have larger percentages of people willing to fight. The Federation looked at war and said it was the last resort, the bad guys looked at war and though "yeehaw, sounds good to me" and so they pretty much balance each other out. A more military minded Federation would end up being the worst tyrant the Galaxy had ever seen, and knowing that is why Starfleet resisted putting the military mission at its forefront.
This is nicely reflected in the Dominion War even, if you ask me. For one, the Dominion is an opponent of the scale of the Federation, except that it has a mindset of total war. And it seems to me, that the Federation is the prime target of pretty much all Dominion Attacks (it's more or less even stated in the DS9 series). I can't remember the show ever talking about how Romulans or Klingons lost actual planets. It's Betazed here, Benzar there, Earth being 9/11'd by the Breen and so on an on and yet still in the end, somehow Starfleet is the biggest player around, while the Klingons and even the Romulans end up in a severely weakend state post-war. That's all because one state has reserves it could mobilize (in terms of industrial and scientific power and manpower), while the others were in the exact same state that Japan used to be on the Eve of Pearl Harbour. They have a lot of power, but they can't replace it and what's gone is gone and will need a long time to be replaced.