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"A Taste of Armageddon" is one of classic
Trek's occasional, obvious metaphors for the absurdity of the then-cold war between East and West. Gene Lyons stars as a Federation ambassador named Fox, who boards the
Enterprise to reach the planet Eminiar VII, where he hopes to negotiate a peace treaty with the inhabitants. Instead the crew of the
Enterprise gets caught in the middle of an interplanetary war between Eminiar and neighboring planet Vendikar. The twist is that the war is being fought on computers, and compliant residents of those "destroyed" areas obediently report to disintegration chambers, where their "virtual" death is made literal. When the
Enterprise is "hit" in one of these simulations, both the warlords of Eminiar VII and Ambassador Fox fully expect Capt. Kirk and crew to report to the disintegration center. The feisty Kirk has other plans, of course. And while the madness of this controlled Armageddon makes a suitably surreal satire of the arms race in the 1960s, the story also evoked the endless, daily reports of body counts during the Vietnam War, with no resolution in sight. Aside from its parable aspect, however, the episode gave Kirk one of his earliest and most compelling scenes of Kirkian preachiness in a bold monologue about peace, reportedly written and rewritten numerous times by series producer and indispensable creative hand Gene L. Coon.
--Tom Keogh
From the Back Cover
Kirk and Spock become involved in a clean and orderly war in which the targets are determined by computers.
TREK TRIVIA
This episode marks the first on-screen Star Trek appearance for Barbara Babcock (Mea 3), although she had previously been heard as Trelane's mother in "The Squire of Gothos."
David L. Ross (Lieutenant Galloway) appeared as a security guard in all three seasons of the original series; Sean Kenney (Lieutenant DePaul) played the crippled Captain Pike in "The Menagerie."