Originally posted by Supdon3
At the time, the ships were unknown and were later identified as Kilrathi.
Originally posted by Supdon3
From the Confederation Handbook
Summary: At 0450 hours on 2638.229, Iason made visual contact with three Kilrathi B'ru'k-class merchantmen. For approximately five hours the Iason attempted to establish communication with the alien vessels, with no response. During this time the Iason maintained a continuous data-stream transmission to CN HQ. About 1000 hours Kilrathi ships opened fire without warning, destroying the Iason's offensive, defensive, drive and life-support capabilities.
Captained by Commander Jedora Andropolos
)Originally posted by Bandit LOAF
It does not say that.
Originally posted by mpanty
Since we can't search for threads anymore, I would expect lots of topics arleady covered in previous threads to come back...
Originally posted by WildWeasel
Hehe. Every topic ends up coming back, anyway. Even the stupid ones. You should know that by now.
Originally posted by LeHah
There were supposedly TWO Iason incidents. The first was the one stated in Victory Streak and the second from the Movie. Same ship name, same captain name... two different incidents though. Paladin was on the Iason during the film's incident.
BTW, anything printed in a published WC book, is automaticly canon. No ifs, ands or buts.

Originally posted by TC
Wow... It, along with the movie novel, fixes and clarifies some things that would otherwise be problems. The research was also done in a rather good manner so that it pretty much fits in with the movie and the games.
TC
A CZer's opinion is, in most cases, a pretty lame yardstick by which to measure quality.Originally posted by Preacher
I've read so much negative reviews of it from other CZ'ers that I don't dare waste my time & money trying to find it or buy it.
Originally posted by Bob McDob
I still believe the Confed Handbook wasn't put together with the explicit purpose of meshing perfectly with WC canon...
Originally posted by Frosty
A CZer's opinion is, in most cases, a pretty lame yardstick by which to measure quality.