I agree that Babylon is in the superior position. I agree that his overall paranoia is unmerited. The greater border dispute is not the issue here.
Pharaoh, the cases cited don't compare. Bab forces cannot cross the mountain and move "deep inside the Persian heartland." At best, a chariot from Arrariver could move within striking range of Susa.
Nor can a Persian force cross the mountains and move "deep" into Bab territory. At best, fast units from the Al-Khabir could attack fortresses on the Tigris. But now, fast units can attack a Bab city from the newly constructed road.
For another example, Persia could build a city separated from the head of the Arrariver by only one hills tile. Then a Bab Chariot could move along the river up to four tiles, move onto the hills, and have a full mp for attack left.
The Arrariver is a terrain feature. It is there when the hypothetical city site is chosen by Persia. It can't be removed. There was no river or road breaching the barrier when Zariqum was founded.
The road now there was built for a strategic reason. If the reason is defensive access the need can be filled by a road in the hills without breaching the mountains.
Babylon did not build a fort on the mountain at the head of Arrariver, which could be construed as an offensive position. He built a defensive position on the inferior hills terrain. Likewise at Zariqum he built no fortification on the mountains.
Babylon did not station fast units or strong units on the mountains, only the weakest scouts. This confirms the defensive posture of Bab forces.
Ask the question in the reverse: would Sinbad be complaining if Babylon had built a road up from Zariqum in the mountains? The answer is, "Yes."
The way to peaceful relations here is clear. Building the road is perceived as a threat. Removing the road removes the threat.
Pharaoh, the cases cited don't compare. Bab forces cannot cross the mountain and move "deep inside the Persian heartland." At best, a chariot from Arrariver could move within striking range of Susa.
Nor can a Persian force cross the mountains and move "deep" into Bab territory. At best, fast units from the Al-Khabir could attack fortresses on the Tigris. But now, fast units can attack a Bab city from the newly constructed road.
For another example, Persia could build a city separated from the head of the Arrariver by only one hills tile. Then a Bab Chariot could move along the river up to four tiles, move onto the hills, and have a full mp for attack left.
The Arrariver is a terrain feature. It is there when the hypothetical city site is chosen by Persia. It can't be removed. There was no river or road breaching the barrier when Zariqum was founded.
The road now there was built for a strategic reason. If the reason is defensive access the need can be filled by a road in the hills without breaching the mountains.
Babylon did not build a fort on the mountain at the head of Arrariver, which could be construed as an offensive position. He built a defensive position on the inferior hills terrain. Likewise at Zariqum he built no fortification on the mountains.
Babylon did not station fast units or strong units on the mountains, only the weakest scouts. This confirms the defensive posture of Bab forces.
Ask the question in the reverse: would Sinbad be complaining if Babylon had built a road up from Zariqum in the mountains? The answer is, "Yes."
The way to peaceful relations here is clear. Building the road is perceived as a threat. Removing the road removes the threat.
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