Know Your Lore: Interbellum Part 2 - Into the Outland

The great tragedy of the high elves of Silvermoon is mirrored in the personal tragedy of the last of the Sunstrider line, Kael'thas. The rise of the blood elves of Silvermoon is the story of the first prince of the Sin'dorei, Kael'thas. Betrayed by old allies, abandoned by old friends, shattered and on the verge of destruction, Kael'thas Sunstrider did what he believed he had to do to save his people.
If you only know Kael'thas from his appearances during The Burning Crusade, then you do not know him. You know a man weary of broken promises, seduced by the lies told by the greatest manipulator the Burning Legion can hope to boast. You have not seen a young man stripped of everything -- his father, his city, most of his people, even the frail chance at a love he never really believed he could have -- and thrown headlong into a war he had no way to fight, to watch his people used as disposable fodder by hateful zealots that were supposed to be their allies.
Last week, we discussed Kael'thas' role in the foiling of Illidan's attempt to destroy the Lich King. This week, we will discuss how the sin'dorei went from members of the Alliance to, eventually, members of the Horde. One man, bitter, angry, and treacherous, helped foment the annihilation of tenuous bonds between the former high elves and the humans. That man's name was Garithos, and it is thanks to Garithos that the division came.
The king is dead but the fool remains
Grand Marshall Garithos was a leader by default. He took no orders from Stormwind or any nation that would today be recognized as part of the Alliance. Rather, he was a survivor of Arthas Menethil's initial rampage across Lordaeron as well as the following atrocities of the demons of the Burning Legion. A native of Lordaeron, Garithos' forces were whatever survivors of the Lordaeron military he could scrape together, and his authority was that of a commander the chain has defaulted into command. In essence, he was the leader of the living remnants of Lordaeron entirely because everyone who outranked him was dead.
As you might imagine, while he wasn't the most competent leader imaginable, he had to be good enough to evade the demons and undead and bring a sizable force together, keep it more or less intact, and continue to wage warfare on the various undead and demon forces left in the area after the Burning Legion left for Kalimdor and its ultimate defeat. Cut off from any and all possible reinforcements (which would have been coming from regions fairly distant at best), Garithos simply assumed sole command.
In addition to being handed command because everyone else was dead and his main qualification to lead being that he was good at hiding from zombies, Garithos was a remarkably unpleasant individual. For one thing, he was racist to the point that he barely considered his own dwarf and elf allies worth using as cannon fodder. Kael'thas made the mistake of bringing those blood elves who could fight to the New Alliance led by Garithos (assuming that it would maintain the policies of Lordaeron), only to discover that his nominal commander viewed him and his people with barely constrained contempt. One could argue that Kael'thas would have been better off taking his people south to Stormwind or even just to Aerie Peak, but to Kael'thas, the fight against those that had destroyed his city, his Sunwell, and his father (and nine-tenths of his people) could not be ignored.
Sunstrider's lament
After the events of Illidan's incursion, Kael'thas attempted to report to Garithos what had transpired, only to find his report dismissed. In fact, Garithos barely wanted the blood elves in his forces at all and used them as scouts and holding forces instead of making use of them on the front lines. It was this treatment that ultimately led Kael'thas and his forces to be assigned to repairing observatories while the Scourge marched on the New Alliance forces camped in the remains of Dalaran. Garithos didn't even deign to bring Prince Kael'thas along for the battle but instead forced the sin'dorei troops to do menial labor. Worse, it was labor they were neither supplied nor qualified to perform in the first place.
Lady Vashj and her naga, left in the area without Illidan following Malfurion, Tyrande, and Maiev's actions, took advantage of Kael'thas' situation and Garithos' insipid behavior. The more Garithos handed Kael'thas and his sin'dorei unreasonable tasks, the more Vashj appeared and offered Kael'thas the aid he needed to accomplish them. When Garithos found out, he not only handed Kael'thas a dressing down, he also ultimately ordered the blood elf prince to hold out against a Scourge attack while simultaneously withdrawing all possible support, in essence setting up Kael'thas and the blood elves to be annihilated. This of course forced Kael to take more aid from Vashj and her naga or be destroyed.
As you might expect from a jumped-up racist, when he returned to Dalaran and found that Kael'thas had survived the Scourge attack from the west despite his having diverted all possible support to the south, Garithos rewarded Kael for his success despite impossible odds and repented his punitive and boorish behavior. Well, if he'd had an ounce of sense, that's what he might have done. Instead, he declared that for allowing the naga to help instead of dying, Kael'thas was a traitor to the New Alliance (said Alliance consisting only of the soldiers under Garithos' command, really) and that he would be executed -- and all his blood elf soldiers with him.
That's right: A man whose entire command only existed because everyone good at their jobs had died doing them and whose primary skill as a general consisted of knowing how to hide and how to win a fight when you have six-to-one odds on your side decided he would not only execute the ruling monarch of an entire people, but the entirety of that people's military as well. Garithos didn't take his stupid racism lightly.
Twisted and pinned
Kael'thas had already completely fallen out of any sort of delusions about his "commander." Realizing that Garithos was not only dangerously unstable, racist, and incapable of leading any sort of successful campaign against the Scourge, he viewed Vashj and her naga forces as the only possible way out of a dead-end situation for his people. Since the destruction of Silvermoon and the Sunwell, Kael'thas and his people had felt a growing emptiness, and it was Vashj who explained what it was to him. They were addicted to the magical energies of the Sunwell, just as the Highborne ancestors of both the naga and the high elves had once been addicted to the Well of Eternity's magical power. Kael'thas now needed to find a new magical font for his people or watch them waste away as the addiction grew in ferocity.
It's important to note here that at no point did Kael desire to betray the New Alliance. Garithos repeatedly put Kael into positions in which his only options were to accept the aid of the naga or fail in his missions, perhaps even losing many of his people in the process. Furthermore, while Garithos erupted into hateful suspicion every time he learned of Kael accepting naga aid, it's important to note that at this time, he had no reason to do so. Garithos knew nothing of the naga, their origins, their motivations. While in hindsight we can easily deduce that the naga then were as evil as we know them to be now, all Garithos knew was that a people he knew nothing about were helping Kael'thas to defeat the Scourge.
As Garithos had proved his true intentions by imprisoning Kael'thas and his people in the prisons of Dalaran, Kael chose to heed Vashj and her plan. Using Dalaran's ley lines, the two constructed a portal through which the blood elves and naga could escape before Garithos and his soldiers could stop them. In the end, despite having to overcome the ghosts of the wizards slain when Archimonde destroyed the city, Kael'thas and Vashj held the portal open long enough for the naga and blood elves to escape Dalaran through it.
Imagine Kael'thas' shock when he found himself on a barren world of floating prominences of rock, a desolate red land that Vashj called Outland. Somewhere in this deserted waste, Vashj informed him, was the one being who could help him and his people with their addiction. So once again, Kael'thas Sunstrider found himself looking for Illidan Stormrage.
Next week, Magtheridon's fall.
While you don't need to have played the previous Warcraft games to enjoy World of Warcraft, a little history goes a long way toward making the game a lot more fun. Dig into even more of the lore and history behind the World of Warcraft in WoW Insider's Guide to Warcraft Lore.
Filed under: Analysis / Opinion, The Burning Crusade, Lore, Know your Lore
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Reader Comments (Page 3 of 3)
Twowolves Mar 24th 2011 11:06AM
Just proves the old saying, humans suck. Blood Elves have survived so many disasters and now, freed of their addiction, continue to grow in power towards becoming one of the truly dominate races on Azeroth. Oh yes, it shall come to pass.
Amaxe Mar 24th 2011 11:45AM
"One man, bitter, angry, and treacherous, helped foment the annihilation of tenuous bonds between the former high elves and the humans. That man's name was Garithos, and it is thanks to Garithos that the division came."
I'll have to remember that excuse the next time I get pulled over for Road Rage.
"It was that jerk in front of me officer. He stole my parking space."
The article goes on and on about the racism of Gairithos, but doesn't seem to go into how the Belfs brand an entire faction based on the actions of one man.
"Grand Marshall Garithos was a leader by default. He took no orders from Stormwind or any nation that would today be recognized as part of the Alliance. Rather, he was a survivor of Arthas Menethil's initial rampage across Lordaeron as well as the following atrocities of the demons of the Burning Legion."
So if the Belfs are justified in hating the Alliance because of him, we are justified in hating the Horde because of the first Horde, the Blackrock Orcs and the Scourge.
/facepalm
Mal Apr 17th 2011 5:00PM
I guess it could be said that the belves thought that Garithos was actually acting as the leader of the alliance at the time. Their former alliance was with Lordearon and they never really cared about the dwarves or SW. But really, that's their own dam fault.
I totally agree with you, Alliance and Horde have been gigantic dumbasses sometimes.
/waves Argent Crusade flag.
Eric Mar 24th 2011 4:11PM
Isn't this a bit ingenuous?
Okay, Garithos was a racist ass. No one is arguing that. But where was it said in Warcraft 3 that he was an incompetent ass?
He sent Kael'thas to repair the towers so that he could get useful intel on the Scourge movements he didn't have the manpower to take on.
He won several battles against the Scourge, even liberating Dalaran from an enemy that had wiped out the High Elves and Lordaeron. Also, surviving against the Scourge likely took a bit more than hiding in a cave somewhere, not to mention rallying enough soldiers to create an actual army.
Besides, the Garithos in Warcraft 3 was a pretty weak caricature of an actual person. I personally think that there was a bit of an unreliable narrator going on. Either that or Kael'thas used that elven arrogance to piss Garithos off a ton.
I mean, I can totally imagine Kael'thas joining the New Alliance and simply assuming that he would be in command because he's nobility.
*shrug* Just saying, Racist Ass does not mean incompetent or evil. Just means that he's a racist ass.
Eric Mar 24th 2011 4:13PM
...make that disingenuous.
*speaks English good*
Matthew Rossi Mar 24th 2011 4:42PM
Actually, if you look at HOW Garithos wins battles, you'll see the incompetence. He wins against the Scourge by deliberately pulling every resource away from the group holding his flank in hopes that they'll die even though it will mean an exposed flank. He's told about night elves in Dalaran and he immediately dismisses it simply because he doesn't trust anything Kael'thas tells him due to his race. He repeatedly assigns the blood elves tasks, vital tasks, WANTING THEM TO FAIL and gets angry and punishes them for succeeding anyway.
Combine this with his actions once he allies with Sylvanas and it becomes clear. Garithos isn't the most inept commander ever, but he is inept. His plans all involve winning through overwhelming force: if he can't hit the enemy with far, far more troops than they can defeat, he deliberately leaves some of his own positions out to dry and hopes for a blitz victory. He's a one note general.
Arthur Mar 25th 2011 3:42AM
I just would like to say as my first post here that all the information and discussion brought here by the editors and forum members helped me understand a lot more about the game. I play the game for a while but I was never really curious about the lore until I found this website. Good job everyone on keeping this a nice place to learn more about the lore and the game itself!
Sorry for any typos, english isn't my native language.
OrigamiSlayer Mar 25th 2011 3:18PM
Garithos was by no means a good guy, but I swear in WC3 there was a cutscene where one of the dreadlords essentially says he's been mind controlling the head of the local alliance presence and trying to sow dissent.
Zetsubou Mar 29th 2011 4:09AM
while he might have been the highest officer there at the time, this story does not help the blood elves arguement that the "alliance" betrayed them. i have no idea why kael stayed there and took that abuse. to help his people? a rag tag militia with a bigot leader that has you on suicide squad will not aid your people.
you are right to say that dwarves or other humans might have been better options, but few highelves traveled beyond their country borders. even destroyed, i doubt many strayed far from the well before illidan taught them to feed on pure/fel magic. and the elves tradition of abstaining from worldly matters means they were weakening outcasts with no ties to anyone who could have sent aid. aerie peak was the closest, ironforge was the least affected, and stormwind would have been the most likely to take them in.
all of these places are excrusiatingly far from silvermoon, and trying to move a struggling race with a lack of strong soldiers through plaguelands and across a continent would have been impossible.
the best thing to do would have been to stay there. fortify the land they still held and repel the undead, which had weakened considerably after arthas's departure.
im not big on blood elves tho, so go cling to the horde, ya pointy eared junkies. i prefer draenei on the alliance anyway.