MRBC Report 01-06-3145
Commanding
Officer: Galaxy Commander Bradford Vickers
An
entirely new formation, Mu Galaxy was raised in the 3140s from the populations
of several worlds occupied by the Wolf Empire. An entropy volunteer force, Mu’s
warriors were drawn from a stretch of independent worlds falling between the
Marik-Stewart Commonwealth and The Duchy of Tamarind-Abbey before their incorporation
into the Wolf Empire. Many of these worlds were either unwanted by others or
had deliberately chosen to remain independent, and were bound only by common
geography and prior affiliation to the Free Worlds League.
In
creating Mu Galaxy, the Wolf Empire sought to overcome these limitations and
give their warriors a common cause. In this effort, they were only partially
successful. While Mu’s ranks did initially swell with volunteers, many of those
who joined up found that the reality of Clan life was very different to their
expectations, while chafing at the regimented and disciplined society that they
had become a part of. Its warriors took very little interest in training,
resulting in an overall low quality of readiness.
Adding
to the Galaxy’s woes, its warriors also developed a poor sense of unity or belief
in a common cause, with many of them remaining more loyal to their individual
worlds and cultures. The one attempt Mu made at a live-fire exercise instead degenerated
into a brawl between clusters (and in some cases, individual trinaries within
those clusters) as old regional loyalties flared up. The exercise were
cancelled with the units returning to their individual worlds. Since then,
Galaxy Commander Bradford Vickers had had to treat the Galaxy as a series of independent
commands, rather than a unified whole.
Discipline
has remained a constant problem for Mu Galaxy, with thefts and desertions
common among its clusters. Attempts to enforce discipline through harsh
Clan-style punishments have failed, with several heavy-handed Trueborn officers
suffering ‘accidents’ as a result. With the Empire’s current shortage of
experienced Trueborns, this situation is unlikely to change soon.
If
Theta Galaxy represents the greatest success the Empire has had in integrating
its new population, then Mu is its greatest failure. While so far its incidents
have been isolated, they are occurring across the Galaxy as a whole. Mu seems
to be on the verge of crisis, and it is unclear what could be the results for either
it or the Empire’s other adoptees.
Mu’s
state of readiness is considered to be low. On average, its Clusters are averaging
about 55% of their expected strength, the result of poor discipline, desertions
and high turnover rates. Most of the Galaxy’s equipment comes from salvage,
with almost no Clan Technology present in their ranks. Even then, Mu has
remained near the bottom of the supply lists, drawing from equipment that other
units have passed over. Its clusters use conventional armour to bulk out their
strength, and some of its clusters have had to make up for shortfalls in Battle
Armour with conventional infantry.
19th
Wolf Cavalry
Commanding
Officer: Star Colonel Kendra Tutola
The
19th Wolf Cavalry is considered to be the best unit of Mu Galaxy, which is more
damning with faint praise then any actual consideration of quality. The only
one of the unit’s line Clusters with a Blood named officer, Star Colonel Kendra
Tutola has done her best to try and limit the damage caused by the issues that have
plagued the rest of the Galaxy. A part of this has come from taking a more
hands off approach to the unit’s discipline, avoiding harsh punishments that
might prompt retaliation.
The
19th was raised primarily from Shasta’s population. While the bulk of the
Cluster’s members come from the planet’s urban population, some of its
Elementals are drawn from the planet’s more remote wilderness communities.
These soldiers have shown a strong warrior ethic that has helped them to better
integrate into Clan culture. As an Elemental herself, Star Colonel Tutola has encouraged
these warriors, hoping to use them as an example to better her unit as a whole.
The effectiveness of these Battle Armour squads is somewhat undermined,
however, by the unit’s lack of OmniMechs.
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