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Alternate reality

"Marcus used me to design weapons to help him realize his vision of a militarized Starfleet. He sent you to use those weapons, to fire my torpedoes on an unsuspecting planet, and then he purposely crippled your ship in enemy space, leading to one inevitable outcome: the Klingons would come searching for whomever was responsible, and you would have no chance of escape. Marcus would finally have the war he talked about, the war he always wanted."
Khan Noonien Singh, 2259 (Star Trek Into Darkness)

The militarization conspiracy was a plot by Admiral Alexander Marcus and Section 31 to militarize Starfleet to prepare for war against the Klingon Empire. To realize his goals, Marcus sought to use the savage intellect of the revived war criminal Khan Noonien Singh. When this backfired with tragic results, Marcus went to extreme lengths to cover up the conspiracy, all while exploiting an opportunity to trigger his war.

Origins[]

"I took a tactical risk when I woke that bastard up, believing that a superior intelligence could help us protect ourselves from whatever came at us next. But I made a mistake, and now the blood of everyone he's killed is on my hands."
Alexander Marcus, 2259 (Star Trek Into Darkness)

Admiral Alexander Marcus, the head of Starfleet in the mid-23rd century, had long been dissatisfied with the Federation's response to the belligerent Klingon Empire. Believing war with the Klingons to be inevitable, he sought to unilaterally transform Starfleet into a military organization. Marcus found the secretive, security-minded Section 31 a willing ally for his conspiracy.

Following the loss of Vulcan in 2258, Starfleet began scouring deep space for new resources and came across the SS Botany Bay, containing seventy-three augmented Humans from the 20th century in cryogenic stasis. Marcus woke their leader, Khan Noonien Singh, and held Khan's crew hostage to extort him (under the alias "John Harrison") into designing new ships and weapons. Foremost among these efforts was the powerful Dreadnought-class warship USS Vengeance, built by Section 31 at the Io Facility. Disgruntled, Khan attempted to smuggle his crew to safety by concealing them within advanced long-range torpedoes he had designed. However, he was discovered and forced to flee alone.

Star Trek: Discovery established that a war between the Klingons and the Federation had indeed already occurred in the prime reality; ironically, the war didn't happen in the alternate reality, despite Marcus's fears.

Khan's revenge[]

"I had no choice but to escape alone. And when I did, I had every reason to suspect that Marcus had killed every single one of the people I hold most dear. So I responded in kind."
Khan Noonien Singh, 2259 (Star Trek Into Darkness)
London bombing

The bombing in London

Believing that Marcus had made good on his threat to kill Khan's crew, Khan plotted revenge on Starfleet. He approached Section 31 officer Thomas Harewood, whose daughter was terminally ill, and offered to save her life if Harewood would destroy a Section 31 facility in London. After Khan fulfilled his part of the bargain, Harewood did likewise by detonating a bomb disguised as his Starfleet Academy ring, killing himself and forty-one others. In the ensuing chaos, Khan salvaged a portable transwarp beaming device from the rubble.

The bombing mandated a meeting of Starfleet's senior leadership at the Daystrom Conference Room in Starfleet Headquarters, where Marcus declared a manhunt for "Harrison". Having anticipated just such a meeting, Khan commandeered jumpship 208 and attacked, killing Christopher Pike and several other officers before he was forced to withdraw by James T. Kirk. Khan escaped via transwarp beaming to the uninhabited Ketha Province of Qo'noS, where Starfleet ostensibly could not follow him.

Path to war[]

"That's what scares me: This is clearly a military operation. Is that what we are now? 'Cause I thought we were explorers."
Montgomery Scott, 2259 (Star Trek Into Darkness)

Devastated by Pike's death, Kirk implored Marcus to authorize an off-the-books mission to pursue Harrison. Marcus saw in Kirk the opportunity to eliminate Khan, cover up his conspiracy, and incite war with the Klingons on his terms, all in a single stroke. Marcus instructed Kirk to take the USS Enterprise to the Klingon Neutral Zone and kill Harrison using seventy-two long-range torpedoes, which he knew contained Khan's crew. He also arranged for the sabotage of the Enterprise's warp core, which would leave her stranded when the Klingons came to investigate the source of the torpedoes; war would undoubtedly follow.

Enterprise first officer Spock strongly objected to executing Harrison without trial, and ultimately prevailed on Kirk to arrest Harrison instead. Despite the failure of the Enterprise's warp drive, Kirk decided to proceed with the mission. On the surface of Qo'noS, the Enterprise's away team ran afoul of a Klingon patrol, who were in turn slaughtered by Harrison, who then surrendered himself, correctly inferring that his crew were still alive from the presence of the torpedoes on the Enterprise. Kirk sent a message to Starfleet informing them that he had Harrison in custody, inadvertently alerting Marcus that he was in danger of being exposed.

Aboard the Enterprise, Harrison revealed his true identity and his involvement with Marcus. At his urging, Leonard McCoy and Carol Marcus opened a torpedo and found one of Khan's crew inside. Khan also gave Kirk the coordinates of the Io Facility, which Kirk passed to Montgomery Scott on Earth. Scott arrived at the drydock as the Vengeance was preparing to launch, and snuck aboard.

Battle over Luna[]

"War is coming – and who's gonna lead us? You?! If I'm not in charge, our entire way of life is decimated!"
Alexander Marcus, 2259 (Star Trek Into Darkness)
USS Enterprise and USS Vengeance face off

The Vengeance arrives in the Neutral zone

Commanding the Vengeance, Marcus confronted the Enterprise at the edge of Klingon space and ordered Kirk to hand Harrison over, to which Kirk demurred. After Kirk revealed his knowledge of Khan's crew, Marcus concluded that everyone on the Enterprise needed to be silenced.

USS Vengeance chasing Enterprise

The Vengeance chases the Enterprise at warp speed

The Enterprise raced for Earth, bringing evidence of Marcus's conspiracy. However, the technologically superior Vengeance overtook the Enterprise and forced her out of warp near Luna with a phaser barrage, two-hundred thirty-seven thousand kilometers short of Earth. Marcus rejected Kirk's plea for mercy and prepared to destroy the Enterprise, only to find the Vengeance's systems disrupted from within by Scott. The temporary lull allowed Kirk and Khan to board the Vengeance in environmental suits.

Kirk, Scott, and Khan made their way to the bridge of the Vengeance and seized control, though Marcus remained defiant. Khan promptly turned against Kirk, overwhelmed his team, and murdered Marcus. He then demanded that Spock surrender his crew or face destruction. Spock complied, allowing Khan to transport the seventy-two torpedoes to the Vengeance in exchange for Kirk and the others. Khan opened fire on the Enterprise, unaware that Spock had foreseen his treachery and armed the torpedoes, after McCoy removed the cryo-tubes. The explosion of the torpedoes crippled the Vengeance.

USS Enterprise falling to Earth

The Enterprise plummeting to Earth

The two starships, both critically damaged, were caught by Earth's gravity and began falling toward the surface. Kirk managed to reactivate the Enterprise's warp core in time to avert a crash, but suffered fatal radiation poisoning in the process. Believing his crew to be dead, Khan directed the Vengeance to crash into Starfleet Headquarters in a final act of spite. The enormous ship plowed through San Francisco, obliterating landmarks like Alcatraz Penitentiary and killing many civilians before coming to a rest.

Khan survived the crash and leapt from the wreck in a bid for freedom. Spock pursued him with the intent of killing him to avenge Kirk's death. The two fought, though Khan eventually gained the upper hand. Meanwhile, McCoy realized that Khan's blood could be used to revive Kirk. Nyota Uhura beamed down and stunned Khan repeatedly, allowing Spock to defeat and incapacitate him.

Aftermath[]

"When Christopher Pike first gave me his ship, he had me recite the Captain's Oath, words I didn't appreciate at the time. Now I see them as a call for us to remember who we once were, and who we must be again."
James T. Kirk, 2260 (Star Trek Into Darkness)
USS Vengeance crashes into San Francisco

The Vengeance crashes in San Francisco

McCoy performed a blood transfusion to restore Kirk to life. Khan was placed back into stasis with the rest of his crew.

Nearly a year later, Kirk spoke at a memorial for the lives lost as a result of Khan and Admiral Marcus's actions. In his speech, Kirk reminded the attendees that Starfleet's true mission was the exploration of the galaxy. Shortly afterward, he returned to the Enterprise, to begin the first five-year mission. (Star Trek Into Darkness)

The conspiracy ultimately failed since, as Montgomery Scott once stated, Starfleet was not a military organization. (Star Trek Beyond)

Appendices[]

Background information[]

Co-writer Damon Lindelof said the militarization plot in Star Trek Into Darkness came about because they needed to acknowledge the events of Star Trek, but "obviously we don't want Starfleet to militarize, so that's going to be the force of antagonism in the movie, is that that's happening, either in secret or openly." The protagonists, the Enterprise crew, would then "have to sort of make an argument against militarization. That being said, that's going to be a hard argument for them to make, because maybe Starfleet should be militarizing. So the bad guy in the movie is going to be a guy who's, like, going one step too far."

Furthermore, it enabled them to bring in Khan in a new way: "The whole reason that we're doing these movies is these things are unfolding somewhat differently. So wouldn't it be cool if Khan actually got woken up before this movie started, and he's in play? Once we came upon that idea, then it became absolutely mandatory to call him something else, because if Kirk and the crew of the Enterprise didn't know who this guy was or were being lied to about his identity, we needed to replicate that process for the audience." [1]

The storyline had real-life parallels to the miltaristic response of President George W. Bush to 9/11. "All that stuff was in the air and I think we weren't trying to make a sociopolitical statement when we wrote the story, but we just started gravitating towards those ideals because that’s what was on the news," said Lindelof. [2] Actor Simon Pegg felt "There is a parallel with the terrorist activities of Osama Bin Laden and the decision to attack Iraq. Iraq had nothing proven to do with 9/11, and yet Bush used that as an excuse to start a war with those people." He also compared Marcus to Bush's vice-president Dick Cheney. [3]

Apocrypha[]

The Star Trek: Countdown to Darkness comic book series and subsequent issue "Star Trek After Darkness, Part 1" reveal the Mudd Incident was an early attempt to start the war with the Klingons: Robert April would take over the Enterprise, and thereby begin the war by handing the flagship to Kor.

External link[]

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