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Tag: Klingons

  • A Brief History of Klingon-Federation Conflict

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    The Klingons, more than any other alien beings on Star Trek—perhaps only really rivaled by the Vulcans—are one of the most enduring presences across almost 60 years of the franchise. In that time we’ve seen their culture and society explored, their history rewritten, and seen them be at odds with, work alongside, and reverse that relationship with our heroes more than a few times. That potential for conflict between the Klingons and Starfleet, no matter what the status quo of Star Trek‘s timeline says at some points, is as enduring as the Klingons themselves.

    Yes, even long after the signing of the famous Khitomer Accords that heralded a new era of cooperation between the Klingon Empire and the United Federation of Planets, the two factions have found ways to return to open war, a status quo that defined humankind’s relationship with the Klingons basically from first contact. Here’s a brief rundown of the waxing and waning Earth-Qo’noS relationship over centuries of Star Trek lore.

    © Paramount

    2151: The Broken Bow Incident

    Humanity’s first contact with the Klingon Empire would set the stage for centuries of unease between Earth and Qo’noS, even if it was partially down to shadowy controlling forces rather than necessarily ill relations between the two worlds. The fallout of temporal manipulation from a mysterious being leveraging the Suliban terrorist group known as the Cabal to manipulate the balance of power among the Great Houses: first contact between human and Klingon kind occurred in Broken Bow, Oklaholma, when a Klingon courier was shot down over Earth in an engagement with Cabal members.

    Grievously wounded by a local farmer, the courier, Klaang, was recovered by Starfleet and Vulcan authorities—and although the latter negotiated the return of Klaang to Klingon space, the former insisted on being the ones to return him, unintentionally violating the Klingon’s long-established codes of honor around injured warriors and putting Earth and Qo’noS off on the wrong foot.

    2220s: The Federation-Klingon Cold War

    After the founding of the Federation a decade after first contact with the Klingons, the Empire and the new interstellar organization largely stayed at arm’s length for decades, only for the Federation and Klingons to slip into an intense period of cold war by the early 2220s, contesting various colonial expansions by the Federation into what the Empire believed was its own space. Although broadly considered an extended cold war rather than a series of smaller engagements, the Federation and Klingons did occasionally engage in hostility during the period: most notably at the Battle of Donatu V in 2245, which saw tensions briefly boil over in a highly contested sector of the Beta Quadrant.

    Although the battle ended inconclusively, it did briefly pause tension between the Federation and the Empire, with neither side making notable contact with each other for the next decade.

    Star Trek Battle Of The Binary Stars
    © Paramount

    2256-7: The First Federation-Klingon War

    That changed in 2256 with the outbreak of total conflict between the two powers. The war was spurred by an encounter between Klingon forces rallied by the nationalist T’Kuvma and the Starfleet vessel Shenzhou in what would become the Battle of the Binary Stars—which lead to significant casualties to a combined Klingon fleet representing all 24 of the current Great Houses of the Empire’s political system, including T’Kuvma’s death at the hands of Shenzhou senior officer Michael Burnham, as well as the loss of Shenzhou‘s captain, Philippa Georgiou, and the deaths of thousands more Starfleet officers aboard a number of vessels that arrived to aid the Shenzhou.

    Although brief, the war was catastrophic for a largely unprepared Federation, contesting with the might of a fully united Klingon Empire, which made deep inroads to Federation territory, including being in arm’s reach of Earth itself by the end of the year. In an act of desperation, the Federation Council planned to surreptitiously destroy Qo’noS with the deployment of a hydrogen bomb near the planet’s core, although the plan was ultimately foiled by the intervention of the USS Discovery, which helped shift the balance of power on the Klingon High Council and push the Empire towards an armistice.

    Even though the conflict ended in an agreeable peace—with minor territorial changes at best for either side—the Federation had endured the bloodiest conflict in its century of history. One hundred million Federation civilians and Starfleet personnel were killed over the course of the war, and Starfleet itself was significantly diminished with the loss of approximately a third of its standing fleet.

    2267: The Second Federation-Klingon War

    The Federation and the Klingon Empire stayed largely within their own borders in the immediate aftermath of the war, maintaining a tense period of peace for the best part of a decade. However, conflict briefly arose again in the 2260s, as the Empire began to aggressively make demands of territory occupied by the Federation. With diplomatic talks breaking down by 2267, open conflict briefly flared up again over the planet Organia, a key world on the Klingon-Federation border.

    The Starfleet flagship Enterprise was sent to Organia to secure the world upon the declaration of war, despite the Prime Directive forbidding Federation influence on pre-warp civilizations such as the one documented on the planet. Unable to prevent the Klingons from landing an occupation force on Organia, Enterprise briefly retreated—leaving Captain Kirk and his first officer, Spock, stranded—to marshal Starfleet against Imperial forces headed towards Organia. The war came to an abrupt end with the revelation by the Organians that they were in fact a highly advanced, non-corporeal species, who used their powers to prevent the fleets from engaging and to forcefully establish a new peace treaty between the warring powers.

    Star Trek Khitomer Conference
    © Paramount

    2267-2293: The Treaty of Organia and the Khitomer Accords

    The Treaty of Organia (and the implied threat of the Organians) brought an end to the second war as soon as it had started and established disputed territories that both factions could explore and colonize, putting the Federation and Klingon Empire back into their usual cycle of uneasy peace. For the next few decades the Klingons and Federation would rattle sabers at each other over disputed worlds, in some case abiding by the Organian Treaty’s establishment of land claims, in other surreptitiously arming native societies in attempts to shift the balance of power.

    It would take disaster to push the two interstellar powers into true diplomatic relations. In 2293 Qo’noS’ only moon, Praxis, exploded after generations of overmining as one of the Empire’s key energy resources, threatening the viability of Qo’noS itself as toxic pollution infected the world’s atmosphere. With Qo’noS estimated at being only capable of sustaining life for another 50 years, the Klingon Chancellor Gorkron approached the Federation to formally establish new peace talks, in the hopes of being able to fund attempts to save Qo’noS’ atmosphere through trade and research pacts with the world’s former sworn enemy.

    However, Gorkron was assassinated while being escorted by the Enterprise-A to Earth for the talks, sparking a brief crisis that threatened to push the Federation and Empire to war once again. The crew of the Enterprise-A as well as the starship Excelsior, helmed by former Enterprise senior officer Hikaru Sulu, managed to successfully foil attempts to disrupt the reconvened diplomatic talks at Khitomer, exposing a conspiracy of Romulan, Klingon, and Federation forces. The exposure of the conspiracy ultimately lead to the signing of the Khitomer Accords, establishing a new formalized peace between the Empire and the Federation.

    2344: The Battle of Narendra III

    Although the Khitomer Accords dramatically reshaped the balance of power within the Alpha and Beta Quadrants, there were still tensions between the Empire and Starfleet, even as the former rebuilt from the ecological devastation brought about by Praxis’ destruction. These tensions ultimately subsided thanks to the intervention and sacrifice of the Starfleet flagship Enterprise-C during a conflict between the Romulan Star Empire and a Klingon colony on Narendra III.

    Although the colony was nearly destroyed, alongside the Enterprise-C itself as it engaged the Romulan forces (after a temporal anomaly briefly created an alternate timeline where the Federation and Klingon Empire were at war with each other once more), the actions of Starfleet, as well as the hostility of the Romulans, caused a significant sea change in Klingon political alliances, with the Star Empire rebuked in favor of closer ties to the honorable Federation. This ultimately led to the establishment of a renewed Treaty of Alliance, which allowed both powers passage through their respective spaces and a process to request aid in military conflicts, and ushered in a new era of peace and co-operation between the Federation and the Klingons.

    Star Trek First Battle Of Deep Space Nine
    © Paramount

    2372-2373: The Third Federation-Klingon War

    Alas, the peace would briefly be disrupted 30 years on from Narendra III thanks to the influence of a major power from the Gamma Quadrant, a multi-species oligarchy that surreptitiously provoked the Klingon Empire into an invasion of the Cardassian Union. The invasion was condemned by the Federation, which was heavily involved in ongoing territorial disputes with the Cardassians as well as the process of assisting and assessing the formerly occupied world Bajor for entry to the Federation in the wake of becoming a strategic ally with the discovery of a stable wormhole to the Gamma Quadrant within its space.

    The current Klingon Chancellor, Gowron, pulled the Empire out of the Khitomer Accords and Treaty of Alliance in protest of the Federation’s disapproval, and after an attempted assault on Federation forces aboard Deep Space Nine, the Starfleet-Bajoran station located at the mouth of the wormhole, open war broke out between the Federation and the Empire in early 2373, as Klingon forces committed to an invasion of the Archanis sector, which had been a historically disputed region of space between the Federation and the Empire for the century prior.

    The third Federation-Klingon War came to an end with a ceasefire agreement with the exposure of Dominion agents within the Empire’s high command as saboteurs responsibly for the tension. Although the ceasefire was broken shortly after, threatening a continuation of hostilities, the Federation and Klingon Empire ultimately restored their alliance after the Cardassian Union entered its own formal alliance with the Dominion, leveraging the latter power’s military might to beat back the Klingon invasion. Reunified but significantly damaged by the brief war, the Federation and Klingon braced for the outbreak of a new war between themselves and the Cardassian-Domion alliance… one that would prove to be the deadliest conflict in Federation history since its first war with the Klingons.

    Bonus Round: The Black Path Crisis of 3069

    Although we don’t know broad swaths of Federation-Klingon history in the wake of the Dominion War’s conclusion, the current ongoing IDW Star Trek comic The Last Starship, set in the 31st century in the wake of the devestating galactic event known as the Burn—an imbalance of dilithium that destroyed every active warp core in the galaxy, greatly destabilizing interstellar activity—explores a brief but devestating conflict between the remnants of Starfleet and a radicalized Klingon group known as the Black Path that emerged to capitalize on the chaos caused by the Burn.

    Believing the disaster represented a need for the Klingons to return to their martial ways, the Black Path began engaging in hositlities with the Federation (which had, up to the emergence of the Burn, grown to encompass almost every known civilization in space) in the immediate aftermath of the Burn. Although the Path and its fleet were halted by the death of its leader at the hands of Captain Sato of the USS Omega (with the assistance of a resurrected James T. Kirk; it’s a long story), the end of the crisis couldn’t come before a devestating attack by the fleet on Earth itself, unleashing its volatile warp cores as massive orbital bombs dropped on multiple key cities on Earth.

    The loss of life, on top of the continued destablization of galactic order, saw United Earth vote to leave the Federation immediately, reestablishing its independence for the first time in almost a thousand years. By the 32nd century, however, with the aid of a time-displaced USS Discovery, United Earth re-entered talks to rejoin the rebuilding Federation in the wake of Discovery‘s resolution of the Burn crisis in 3189—and seemingly peaceful relations with the Klingons were re-established, as the re-opened Starfleet Academy welcomed Klingon cadets in its first waves of new students since the Burn shortly thereafter.

    Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.

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    James Whitbrook

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  • How Do You Run a Klingon Empire?

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    Star Trek has spent almost 60 years delivering the ins and outs of Starfleet and the Federation, detailing the history of its greatest triumphs and greatest crises. But one of its most enduring factions has had its structure shrouded in mystery and myth for almost that entire period too… and no, it’s not the Romulans. It’s the Klingon Empire.

    The Klingons have been one of Star Trek‘s most fleshed-out alien species—charting their evolution from sworn enemy to stalwart but begrudging ally—and in that time we’ve had plenty of stories about the political machinations at play within their borders. But just how the Klingon Empire has existed and operated for thousands of years has long been obfuscated. Much of what we know surrounding Klingon society as it would be codified for most of Star Trek history—after Next Generation radically overhauled the Klingons into an honor-bound warrior caste and away from their roots in the original Star Trek—was ideated in memos written by Ronald D. Moore during production of the TNG season three episode “Sins of the Father,” which depicted the first time Star Trek visited the Klingon homeworld.

    But even though since then we’ve learned a great deal of Klingon culture and history, just how the Empire formed and how it works and sustains itself has only been detailed in the broadest sense, and sometimes even wrapped up in the mythos of Klingon spirituality, compared to our historical understandings and explorations of the Federation’s founding. But, from myth to society, we at least do have a picture of how the Klingon Empire operates.

    The Founding of an Empire

    A historical reenactor playing Molor during the festival of Kot’baval. © Paramount

    Much of the earliest eras of Klingon history are rooted in the mythopoetic legends of its “modern” society by the time of the 24th century. But although there have been some inconsistencies on the whens, we do know that sometime in the 10th century the Klingon Empire as we would come to know it would begin to take shape.

    During the reign of a tyrannical leader named Molor, the Klingon people began to rise up in support of a warrior named Kahless, who stood in defiance of Molor’s rule. After routing an army of 500 of Molor’s troops alongside his future wife, Lukara, Kahless began a campaign against Molor that climaxed at the river Srkal, where Kahless slew Molor with his sword, the first bat’leth. Although a lowborn—it’s unclear how much before Molor’s rule if the Great Houses that would eventually play a fundamental role in the organizational structure of Klingon society held any kind of political sway—Kahless declared himself the first Emperor of a new Klingon Empire, ushering in a new age of unity and expansion for the Klingon people.

    The Reign of the Emperor

    Star Trek Kahless Ii
    © Paramount

    Kahless would eventually pass into myth as Kahless the Unforgettable, but his rule helped shape foundational elements of Klingon society and structure that would endure for a millennium. It was Kahless who helped establish the Klingons’ ritualized codes of honor and encouraged their martial prowess, and his rule would both see the disparate Klingon people united and establish the underpinnings of Klingon spirituality when his reign ended with Kahless leaving his people and planet behind to ascend to Sto-vo-kor, the Klingon afterlife.

    What followed for the Klingons was almost a thousand years of dynastic monarchy, with the royal line of emperors overseeing Qo’noS’ development as the heart of a burgeoning interstellar empire, conquering other worlds and subjugating species—and in turn occasionally being laid low themselves. Four hundred years after Kahless’ rise, Qo’noS itself was invaded by a mysterious race hailing from the Gamma Quadrant known only as the Hur’q (Klingonese for “Outsider”), who looted the Klingon homeworld of many valuable cultural artifacts, leaving much of early Klingon history lost to myth and fables.

    Dark Times and the High Councils

    Star Trek Chancellor Gowron
    © Paramount

    Although the power of the Emperor endured for a thousand years, it was not without periods of doubt. Sometime during a period of the Empire’s first millennium, the bloodline of the Emperor that had existed since the time of Kahless the Unforgettable was brought to an end by a coup d’etat. Led by the general K’Trelan, the coup saw Emperor Reclaw assassinated and the entire Klingon imperial family put to the sword. What followed would be retroactively known in Klingon society as “The Dark Time”: a decade where Klingon society would be ruled by a democratically elected council of representatives.

    Although the Klingons’ flirtation with democracy was brief, the Dark Time established key political reforms in the maintenance of the Empire. The rule of the Emperor was re-established in an attempt to consign the council to memory, with a new dynasty given the names and titles of the former slaughtered royals to try and portray an unbroken line carrying back to the days of Kahless. But despite this attempt at maintaining continuity, the rule of the emperor would not last forever: sometime in the 21st century, the final emperor of the third dynasty passed away, with no successor. The power of the Klingon Empire transitioned to a chancellorship… and a High Council not entirely unlike the one from the Dark Time.

    The Power of the Great Houses

    Star Trek Worf Klingon High Council
    © Paramount

    The Klingon High Council operated not on democracy, but on noble rite: the Chancellor oversaw a council that represented 24 of the most powerful and influential families on Qo’noS, established as the Great Houses, with each Great House nominally in charge of specific administrative systems and departments of government. The familial houses themselves likely preceded the existence of the High Council as a political structure, but it was only really after the diminishment of the imperial line that they began having a major role in stewardship of Klingon society.

    Each Great House was patriarchal and feudalistic in nature, ruled by the eldest male of its primary family, with their wife typically designated as House Mistress, in charge of overseeing marriages and other holdings of the family, while the leader of the House would oversee military forces and be responsible for contributions to the High Council. In most cases, leadership of a Great House would pass on to the eldest son of the ruling family, but in some circumstances, leadership could change hands through other means.

    If the leader of a Great House was killed in honorable combat without a male heir, a House Mistress could either petition the High Council for dispensation to rule the House herself (although women could only serve on the High Council in extremely rare circumstances) or invoke the brek’tal ritual, which allowed a Klingon widow to marry the warrior who slew her husband. Across the centuries that the Chancellory and High Council ruled the Empire, some Great Houses fell from grace, either through political machination or the act of discommendation, which could see either an individual Klingon or even their entire house stripped of privilege and honor for multiple generations, shunned out of society, and their holdings picked apart by rival houses.

    Likewise, the office of the Chancellor itself was a similarly fraught position, despite its status as the primary seat of power in the Empire. Klingon Chancellors could be deposed through challenges of combat, or, if they passed peacefully (or by other means), a successor would be chosen through the similarly martial rite of succession, climaxing with a fight to the death.

    But even though Klingon society ultimately transitioned power to its noble houses, the role of the emperor was not lost forever. In 2369, clerics on the moon of Boreth, a key seat of power in Klingon faith, successfully managed to clone Kahless and imprint the body with the teachings of Klingon faith and society, attempting to herald in a new dynasty. However, the clone’s origins were uncovered through the efforts of Worf and Chancellor Gowron—but instead of being discarded, Kahless II was established as emperor once more, although now as a moral guide and religious figurehead for the Klingon Empire, rather than wielding direct power as the High Council did.

    Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.

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    James Whitbrook

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