Paths Not Taken
Deep Space Nine is replete with paths not taken, in terms of storylines. What if Jadzia really had died in āChange of Heartā? What if they had gone to Sigma Iotia II for the 30th anniversary episode instead of learning about the troubles with tribbles? What if Ro Laren, Sito Jaxa, or Thomas Riker had returned?
One path that was never really taken (and as far as I can tell, never seriously contemplated) is major political drama between the Starfleet and Bajoran crews on the station. Yes, Season 2 started with the extremely underrated Circle Trilogy, but that conflict was Far Away on Bajor (and inflamed by Cardassian influence). Beyond a few differences of opinion here and there, Kira and Sisko never seriously clash, which is a little odd, especially given how much grey area they were working in ā a Bajoran-owned space station run by Starfleet officers? āWeāre just here to administrateā? What does that even mean?
But there is one exception: āDramatis Personaeā.
Sorta.
The Valerian Situation May Have Been A Vaccine
See, āDramatis Personaeā shows this exact conflict of Starfleet vs Bajoran playing outā¦ but under alien telepathic influence, dramatizing through lived experience the conflict that destroyed a civilization. Itās an interesting blend of real-world details being repurposed into the aliensā script ā the dynamics are the same, even though the particulars are different.
And so we do get a bit of a preview of what this conflict might look like ā especially from Odo and Quark, who are unaffected. But, in all honesty, it does feel like a bit of a cheat, since it becomes clear at the end that no one was in control of themselves, whatsoever.
Now, I think this episode actually can be used to explain why we donāt see a real conflict break out on the station. After being released from the alien influence, Sisko and Kira (to say nothing of OāBrien, Jadzia, and Bashir) no doubt reviewed the logs, reports, and Odoās account of what happened. They would have seen how quickly the situation unraveled. It would be a vivid reminder to them that they are holding this situation together purely by their goodwill and willingness to cooperate.
Rather than exacerbate existing tensions, the events of āDramatis Personaeā may have allowed the Starfleet and Bajoran crews to reap the benefits of the conflict without suffering the consequences. Thereafter, when minor conflicts would arise, theyād be seen in the light of the Valerian Situation, and addressed with that much more urgency to keep things from totally unraveling.
In this way, the Valerian Situation may have been a vaccine that inoculated the crew against destructive division going forward.
A Doylist Commentary
Though (in)famous among the Star Trek lore for its heavy serialization, DS9 should perhaps be equally (in)famous for its lack of planning around its serialization. There was no long-term arc, no long-term vision for the series. Except for a bit in the seventh season, there is no intentional foreshadowing ā only post hoc foreshadowing that arises out of a choice to follow up on previous stories. The Dominion War was only planned to last six episodes ā right up until it wasnāt. Julian Bashirās genetic code was utterly normal ā right up until it wasnāt. Jed Bartlet didnāt have a chronic illness, right up until Sorkin had the idea for Charlie and the President to be stuck in the residence watching daytime TV ā oops, wrong franchise!
Likewise, in the late first season, the Prophets were probably not on the writersā minds. Even on the (relatively rare) occasion that they decide to tell stories about the Bajorans during the first two seasons, the Prophets are very much a background fixture ā a piece of cultural heritage, not active players in the drama. (Contrast that with later seasons when the Prophets begin to have an active influence ā everything from āAccessionā to āProphet Motiveā to āSacrifice of Angelsā and so on.)
But in hindsight, as I will lay out below, the events of āDramatis Personaeā could easily have been caused by the Prophets, rather than by some one-off alien species from the Gamma Quadrant.
Now, to be frank, I donāt think the writers had decided (at that point) what they wanted to do with the Prophets. Itās only in the context of the series overall that it might seem āin characterā for the Prophets to do something like this. At the time, only 17 episodes in, the Prophets were still pretty uncharacterized, and what we had seen of them so far pointed more toward a hands-off approach.
But if they had decided earlier on that the Prophets were going to be active players in the drama of the series, this episode ā with only a few minor modifications ā could have been used to lay the groundwork for that.
Being so early in the series, they probably would have opted for something a bit more mysterious, a bit more Twilight Zone. Something like this:
An Alternate Story
The Klingon ship returns from the Gamma Quadrant, with everyone aboard comatose from personal combat injuries, save one, who beams to Ops before promptly collapsing into a coma himself. OāBrien detects that the ship is about to explode, but manages to beam out the warp core just in time for it to spectacularly explode, some distance away from the station. The episode continues on unaltered from there.
Then, instead of finding the energy spheres on a distant world that they identify as the former homeworld of the Saltahāna, the Klingons find the energy spheres on Idran, near the far mouth of the wormhole. They arenāt able to identify the civilization of origin, but Odoās ear perk up when he hears them describe the spheres as being āhour-glass-shapedā. Cut to a scene of Odo standing in the Bajoran temple, contemplating an Orb. He shares this revelation with no one.
The rest of the episode continues unchanged, until the last scene. Kira has her heart-to-heart apology with Sisko, and Sisko teases her about letting the mutiny slide āthis timeā. She mentions that the Klingons have all recovered and are on their way home to recuperate, and then heads back out to Ops as Odo enters. He is very unneasy and explains that he has something he needs to share with Sisko, something very delicate and potentially inflammatory. Sisko gently tells him to go on.
ODO: āSir, in reviewing the Klingonsā logs, I discovered anā¦ alarming coincidence. As you know, the Klingons discovered the telepathic energy matrix on an abandoned planet on the other side of the wormhole.ā
SISKO: āYes, in the Idran system.ā
ODO: āThat is correct. What I did not put in my official reportā¦ is that the Klingon science officer described the devices they discovered as being āhour-glass-shaped.āā
camera on Siskoās face as he reacts
ODO: āAs you have experienced first hand, Bajoran orbs do have telepathic capabilitiesā¦ā
SISKO: āAnd Idran is not much farther away from the wormhole than Bajor is. Which means, itās possible that this entire affair was somehow caused by the aliens who live in the wormhole.ā
ODO: āYou can see why I said this was potentially inflammatory. The Orbs may be instruments of alien influence, used for nefarious purposes.ā
SISKO: turns to look off into the distance, maybe out the window āIām not so sure about that. Bajoran history is replete with personal accounts of Orb encounters that were revelatory, life-changing, and overwhelmingly for the better.ā turns to look back at Odo, looking him in the eye āAnd my own experience with an Orb suggested nothing nefarious.ā
ODO: still skeptical āBut you donāt deny that the Orbs may be influencing people and events.ā
SISKO: starts to speak, but pauses. He comes around to the other side of the desk, to stand next to Odo, and look out at Ops ā at Kira specifically. āMaybe. But in this case, perhaps they helped us out.ā
Odo looks out at Kira as well, and then they both look at the Starfleet and Bajoran crews working together ā OāBrien with his Bajoran technicians, Kira planning duty rosters with Daxā¦ every team in Ops integrated with Starfleeters and Bajorans alike.
Sisko and Odo share a look as we fade out.
If they had done this, it would have laid the groundwork for any number of other stories throughout the series. It would have heightened Siskoās arc as a skeptic disbeliever turned Emissary. And, combined with āDuetā and āIn The Hands Of The Prophetsā, would have made for an informal āthree-part season finaleā that recapitulates the main ideas of the First Season, which I think would be pretty awesome.
[continued below]
Oh I love this explanation, thank you for writing this all up!
With regard to their relative level of machiavellianism, I think being able to see clearly all the consequences of all their decisions makes it both a given that they would be more machiavellian as well as making it fairly ethically ācleanā so to speak. We as humans canāt see the consequences of our actions so we have just to rely on what our ethics tell us is the right course, since we donāt really have a better guide. The prophets, otoh, do have a better guide, and we do have a fairly broad evidence base of them seeming genuinely to care about the wellbeing of, at least, the Bajoran people. So for me anyway, I am happy to assume that their judgement was sound, being that they are operating with a level of knowledge and within an entire framework that is completely unfathomable to me and I canāt really assess any individual decisions they make fairly.
Oh huh, thatās a really interesting idea about the implications of Machiavellianism for nonlinear beings. I really like the possibilities that affords for the Prophets ā Iāve long had mixed feelings about interpretations that give the Prophets agency becauseā¦ likeā¦ they donāt seem to necessarily making the Best Choices, but maybe itās different if they know how it all works out.
M-5, nominate this comment by @lwaxana_katana for an insightful remark about the implications of nonlinearity on Machiavellianism. Ah wait, we havenāt got that set up yetā¦ well, weāll get to that!