Section 31

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Section 31
Universe Star Trek universe
Type Intelligence agency
Founded Established in Starfleet charter
Location unknown
Key people Agent Harris (2150s)
Agent Luther Sloan (2370s)
Purpose Defend the United Federation of Planets by any means necessary
Technologies Classified, United Federation of Planets' technologies
Affiliations United Earth (superseded)
United Federation of Planets

In the science fiction franchise Star Trek, Section 31 is an autonomous intelligence and defense organization. It is presented as a special security operation, manned by Federation citizens, that is not subject to the normal constraints of Starfleet ethical protocols.[1] The organization appears, or is mentioned, across nine episodes of Star Trek: Deep Space Nine and Star Trek: Enterprise as well as the 2013 movie Star Trek Into Darkness.

Overview

In the Star Trek storylines, Section 31 exists outside Starfleet Intelligence's influence and deals with threats to Earth's and, later, the Federation's security. Its operating authority stems from a provision of the Starfleet charter—Article 14, Section 31, from which its name is derived—that makes allowances for "bending the rules" during times of extraordinary threats.

Unlike other secret police organizations in the Star Trek universe, such as the Romulan Tal Shiar and the Cardassian Obsidian Order, Section 31 is not an actual branch of government. Accountable to no one, Section 31 focuses on external threats, and pursues those it identifies by whatever means it sees fit.

Little of Section 31's history has been revealed on-screen. Most references to the organization appear in episodes of Deep Space Nine, although Section 31 also appears in Star Trek: Enterprise. Several works of Star Trek spin-off fiction expand on Section 31's operations; Pocket Books published a four-part series profiling connections between Section 31's operations and the missions of James T. Kirk, Jean-Luc Picard, and the crews of Deep Space Nine and the USS Voyager. These novels explicitly link Section 31 to Fleet Admiral Cartwright's actions in Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country and Vice Admiral Matthew Dougherty's actions in Star Trek: Insurrection. Section 31 is also heavily featured in the Star Trek: Enterprise novel The Good That Men Do, in which Trip Tucker joins the organization after his supposed "death". The framing story of the novel, set in the 25th century, establishes that Section 31 may have ceased to exist, although it does provide details[clarification needed].

The film Star Trek Into Darkness features an alternative universe version of Section 31, which is run by Starfleet Admiral Marcus. In this timeline, Section 31 is a secret branch of Starfleet created to protect the Federation from external threats by developing weapons. Marcus' involvement in the organization includes awakening the cryogenically frozen Khan Noonien Singh, whose genetically altered intellect enabled Marcus to develop new weaponry, including the U.S.S. Vengeance, a state-of-the-art warship. Marcus' plans and role in Section 31 were halted by Khan and the crew of the USS Enterprise.

Controversial topics

The implications of Section 31 have been described[by whom?] as "troubling" and its goals and methods "deeply questionable." Its methods include brainwashing, torture, assassinations and, as revealed by the end of the Deep Space Nine TV series, genocide, the crime that is most opposed by the Federation. The genocide involves the creation, by Section 31, of a virus designed to kill a single species, the Founders, with the aim of destroying the Dominion.[1] Section 31 deliberately infected Odo with the virus, knowing he would spread it to other shape-shifters.

Throughout the series, several Deep Space Nine officers, including Julian Bashir, infiltrate Section 31. One of their aims was to obtain a cure for the virus which was threatening Odo's life; however, under orders from Benjamin Sisko, they ultimately collude in hiding the crime. This is part of a pattern of overall loss of moral credibility by Starfleet, in comparison to that which it had in The Original Series and The Next Generation. Deep Space Nine and Star Trek: Insurrection both "position the Starfleet authorities in a very dubious light."[1]

Agents

Section 31 agents include the following characters:

  • Luther Sloan: Star Trek: Deep Space Nine
  • Harris: Star Trek: Enterprise
  • Malcolm Reed: Star Trek: Enterprise
  • Admiral Alexander Marcus, Thomas Harewood, John Harrison: Star Trek Into Darkness
  • Novels only:
    • Charles Tucker III (Star Trek: Enterprise; The Good That Men Do, Kobayashi Maru, The Romulan War: Beneath the Raptor's Wing, The Romulan War: To Brave the Storm, and Rise of the Federation: A Choice of Futures)
    • Tinh Hoc Phuong (The Good That Men Do)
    • Peter Lawrence (The Case of the Colonist's Corpse)
    • Admiral Lance Cartwright (Star Trek VI; Section 31: Cloak)
    • Admiral Matthew Dougherty (Star Trek: Insurrection; Section 31: Abyss)
    • Commander Cortin Zweller (Star Trek: The Next Generation; Section 31: Rogue)
    • Ambassador Aubin Tabor (Star Trek: The Next Generation; Section 31: Rogue)
    • Ensign Roberta Luke ("Scientific Method"; Section 31: Shadow)
    • Cole (Section 31: Abyss)
    • L'Haan (A Time to Kill, A Time to Heal, Typhon Pact - Zero Sum Game, Typhon Pact - Plagues of Night, Typhon Pact - Raise the Dawn, The Fall - A Ceremony of Losses)
    • Dietz (A Time to Kill, A Time to Heal)
    • Vasily Zeitsev (A Time to Kill, A Time to Heal)
    • Sarina Douglas (Typhon Pact - Zero Sum Game, Typhon Pact - Raise the Dawn, The Fall - A Ceremony of Losses)
  • Video games only:
    • Franklin Drake: (Star Trek Online)

Appearances

Star Trek: Enterprise
These episodes were produced after the Deep Space Nine episodes listed below, but their depicted events occur earlier in the narrative.
Star Trek: Deep Space Nine
Star Trek movies
Star Trek novels
Star Trek comics
  • Star Trek: Year Four Enterprise Experiment (2008) issue 5 published by IDW.
  • Star Trek - Mission's End (2009) five issue comic miniseries published by IDW
  • Star Trek issues 21-23, 25-28 (2013) of the ongoing series by IDW set in the alternate reality
Star Trek video games

References

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Further reading

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External links