*Samus stood, arms folded as she stared through the containment field at their prisoner. She had to fight not to smile. He believed he had nearly escaped, believed he had called in reinforcements using one of the Pirates' encryptions. Instead, the plan had worked, and he had given them much of the information they wanted without ever realizing he
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Thank you, I'm certain I will.
*She turns, accompanying Ali and, once out of sight of their captive, letting slip a chuckle and an observation.*
Only you would turn an intelligence briefing into a dinner.
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*Her hand moves to cover Ali's, not letting go until they've almost reached their destination. Not all of the Grand Admirals are in attendance, but three are certainly enough for the time being, along with a half-dozen officers whose positions make them key stewards of strategy within the fleet. They look to Ali and Samus to open the meeting.*
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*For her part, Samus looks to Ali for some clue of how far to let the meal go before starting the briefing. At least holograms will save them the trouble of shuffling papers among their food.*
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"We all know why we're here. Hunter Aran, would you be so kind as to regale our guests with the story of Precious' big adventure this morning?"
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*With a gesture, she begins, describing Precious' engineered escape attempt, the encryptions he used and the course he set; that the encryption has already been used to decipher one transmission that would otherwise have been mistaken for background static, and which has implicated a Pirate spy within the Federation. The evidence blossoms in holos before each dignitary, and Samus isn't entirely successful at keeping from sounding smug by the end.*
The only question that remains is how we will act on what we've gained.
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"Indeed," she comments, giving Samus a brief smile and a nod, with a leading glance at Samus' neglected meal. It's time for Samus to sit and eat, in Ali's opinion. "There is much to consider, and many courses we could set. But let us be mindful of how what we decide here today will set the course for the Federation for years to come."
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A simple dessert course is set out as the arguments die down, and when there's again a chance to be heard universally Ali retakes her seat. "Perhaps we should let the expert state her opinion before becoming too enamored of any favored actions?"
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While we certainly don't want to reveal that we've gained this advantage, it won't do us any good if we never act on it. As offensive as the idea of their spies may be, simply rooting them out will only mean they'll be replaced with new agents and new encryptions. The agents we know are a resource: let us use them to feed misinformation to the enemy. Let us offer bait too tempting to ignore--some of which will be a trap, some of which will appear legitimate, and some of which will expose them to us even more. And as their facilities are revealed, I will deal with them personally.
*Her gaze circles the table, briefly meeting the eyes of each person there, challenging them to argue, defying them to find fault with her plan.*
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"You'll deal with them with appropriate backup," she counters, "the nature of which will be determined as each mission becomes clear. Meanwhile, we'll arrange to conduct more training exercises and scouting missions in those areas we know are near Pirate facilities, to give a veneer of credible excuse as to how we've found them. The longer we can keep the Pirates convinced we're having a string of exceptionally good luck, the better."
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Of course. The finer details of exactly what to move where, and when, I leave to you. And we should also run patrols and exercises in areas we believe are empty, to keep our "luck" from seeming suspiciously frequent.
*There is some discussion of this--certainly, the plan is strategically sound, and aside from the prospect of using Federation personnel and resources as bait it's a good one. That is the chief stumbling block, though, and the bone of contention for those who want to have their cake and eat it too.*
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"If it is the decision of Fleet Command to avoid putting any troops in danger ever," she remarks with a quiet amusement, "we had best shut the entire operation down now so nobody mistakes us for a military."
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I don't suggest sacrificing lives for this--the personnel on bait missions should be volunteers or criminals, under orders to make a fighting retreat while leaving their cargo for the Pirates. Nor do I suggest simply throwing valuable materiel to the Pirates--poisoned bait, so to speak, will act against them wherever they may be hiding; ships with hidden faults, virus-riddled software, unreliable munitions and hardware, and encrypted tracking beacons.
*She takes a moment to let that idea sink in.*
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