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Battle of the Resurrection Ship

From Battlestar Wiki, the free, open content Battlestar Galactica encyclopedia and episode guide
Revision as of 18:08, 26 December 2006 by JubalHarshaw (talk | contribs) (added feature article candidate tag)




Battle of the Resurrection Ship
Galactica and Pegasus engage a basestar
Galactica and Pegasus engage a basestar
Galactica and Pegasus engage a basestar
Summary
Conflict: Second Cylon war
Date: 6 months after the Fall of the Twelve Colonies, approximately less than 48 hours after events of "Resurrection Ship, Part I"
Related Episode(s):
Place: Interstellar space, specific location unknown
Result: Destruction of Cylon Resurrection Ship, decisive Colonial victory
80-90 Vipers, 1 Blackbird, associated RaptorsThe Resurrection Ship
2 Cylon basestars
Associated Raiders, Heavy Raiders"
Combatants
Remnants of the Colonial Fleet Cylons
Commanders
Admiral Helena Cain
Commander William Adama
Basestar command
Strength
battlestar Galactica
battlestar Pegasus

80-90 Vipers, 1 Blackbird, associated Raptors

The Resurrection Ship
2 Cylon basestars
Associated Raiders, Heavy Raiders
Materiel Losses
1 Blackbird
At least 1 Raptor
1-2 basestars
1 Resurrection Ship
Casualties
4 10,000+
[[Colonial battles chronology ({{{series}}})|Battle Chronology]]
Previous Next
Standoff Between Galactica and Pegasus Battle of the Resurrection Ship Battle of the Binary Star System


The Battle of the Resurrection Ship is Galactica's second offensive against the Cylons. Aided with a second battlestar, they attack the Cylon Resurrection Ship in the hopes of causing the Cylons to rethink their plans for chasing the Fleet.

When battlestar Pegasus reunites with the larger remnant of humanity led by the battlestar Galactica, its commanding officer, Admiral Admiral Cain reveals that Pegasus had been tracking a Cylon fleet, and upon reviewing Galactica's logs surmises that this same Cylon fleet had been following Galactica and her Fleet, possibly for months. Earlier long-range reconnaissance missions by Pegasus revealed that the Cylon fleet consisted of 2 basestars, roughly a dozen support ships, and one unidentifiable vessel, much larger than a basestar, which the Cylon fleet appeared to be protecting. Admiral Cain and Commander William Adama realize the probable value of the ship to the Cylons, and begin planning an operation to pool their resources to attack the Cylon fleet.

Starbuck returns from an illicit recon mission to the Cylon fleet, using the Blackbird stealth fighter to take dramatically detailed photos of the unknown ship. The name of the ship, the Resurrection Ship, is discovered by Dr. Gaius Baltar through the captive Cylon agent, Gina. Thrace, Admiral Cain and Commander Adama determine that the Resurrection Ship was a safety net for the Cylons chasing the Fleet and hiding within it. With this safety net removed, the Cylons would seriously reconsider pursuing the Fleet as closely. If a Cylon's body were to die without another body to store their transmitted consciousness, not only would the Cylons lose vital intelligence on Fleet operations, but the Cylon's consciousness would be permanently lost.

New Pegasus CAG Captain Thrace taps once more into her unconventional military thinking in formulating an effective attack plan, which will draw the Cylons to the battlestars and a trap, rather than the other way around. In the plan, the Fleet, consisting only of Galactica and her original civilian ships, would congregate near a handful of ships that appeared to be managing mining operations. When the Cylons engaged, the Fleet would jump away, but a few civilian ships would pretend to have problems engaging their FTL drives and attempt to escape at sublight speeds, drawing the Raiders far away from their basestars. Just before the Raiders would close in, the remaining decoy civilian ships would jump away. Moments later, Galactica and Pegasus will jump to within firing range of both basestars and engage them head-on. Meanwhile, Lieutenant Lee "Apollo" Adama uses the Blackbird to sneak up upon the Resurrection Ship to surgically destroy her FTL drive with a missile to prevent its escape, while the entire complement of fighters from both battlestars, led by Thrace, would pummel the Resurrection Ship and destroy it (Resurrection Ship, Part I).

The attack plan is successfully implemented with minimal losses on the Colonial side. Without their fighter complements and with no gun batteries of their own, the basestars are no match for the combined gun batteries of Galactica and Pegasus, which tear through the basestars, destroying one and crippling (probably destroying) the other.

Moments after disabling the Resurrection Ship's FTL drive, the Blackbird collides with a downed Raptor after Adama's attack, destroying the fragile stealth fighter. Lee Adama manages to eject and, in the process, suffers a puncture in his flight suit. Apollo drifts freely in the middle of space, viewing the battle from a unique angle as he begins to succumb to hypoxia. He is rescued by Racetrack's SAR Raptor from Galactica.

Shortly after the destruction of the Resurrection Ship and at least one basestar, the surviving Cylon forces jump away, marking a significant Colonial victory (Resurrection Ship, Part II).

Strategic impact

The strategic impact of the Battle of the Resurrection Ship marked the first time since the beginning of the Second Cylon War that multiple Colonial battlestars engaged multiple Cylon basestars in battle. The Fall of the Twelve Colonies had been less a battle and more a one-sided slaughter of the Colonials by the Cylons. The ensuing attempts by Galactica to beat off the Cylons chasing the civilian refugee fleet it was shepherding and Pegasus' hit-and-run guerrilla attacks on Cylon assets had never reached the level of decisively defeating a major Cylon fleet and forcing them from the battlefield (Galactica's previous destruction of a basestar was the result of sneaking a nuke inside through subterfuge, and not open combat).

Following this defeat to the Colonial Fleet, the Cylons lose the combat initiative they had maintained since their opening attack six months previously. After this battle, the Cylons became afraid to commit their forces to major strikes, and stop attacking the Fleet en masse. While before, a single basestar would confidently Jump in and wade into Galactica and her air wing (as in the second half of the Battle of Kobol), the Cylons are aware that such an attack now would result in their permanent deaths, and for a time stop actively chasing the Fleet for months following the destruction of the Resurrection Ship. The entire Cylon strategy in the war changes. Instead of constantly trying to destroy the entire Fleet guarded by Galactica and Pegasus, the Cylons focused on smaller, low-risk goals, achieved by hit-and-run attacks on targets of opportunity. For a full month, while the Colonials conduct mining operations in an asteroid belt, a squadron of Cylon Raiders, led by the ace Raider nicknamed "Scar," wreaks havoc on the Colonial's Viper squadrons using hit-and-run strikes, before finally being killed by Kat and Starbuck. Using the metals mined during this operation, the Colonial Fleet manufactures two full Viper squadrons, beginning to recover their losses (Scar). Even two months after the battle, in the Battle of the Binary Star System, the Cylons resort to a trap and disproportionate numbers rather than trying to directly engage the Colonial Fleet as they had in the past (The Captain's Hand).

Notes

  • The Battle of the Resurrection Ship has many similarities to the Battle of Midway. In both, the strategic tide of the war changed with a decisive battle. At Midway, the Japanese fleet was caught off guard when the USS Yorktown, which they had presumed was destroyed or crippled, appeared during the battle and increased the forces available to the Americans. In this battle, the Cylons were surprised by the appearance of Pegasus, long presumed destroyed in the initial Cylon attack, appeared and doubled the forces available to the Colonials. Finally, Apollo's experience of ejecting in the middle of the battle and watching it unfold around him is based on the real life experience of Ensign George Gay during the Battle of Midway. George Gay's plane was shot down and he witnessed the entire battle while floating in the ocean.