Editing Thel 'Vadam
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Thel acted as a voice of reform to the Sangheili, uniting the keeps under a new planetary government, the [[Swords of Sanghelios]]. Returning to his [[Sanghelios|homeworld]], he planned to visit each state to make his case for permanent peace with the [[human]]s they had battled for so many years;{{Ref/Novel|Gla|Chapter=5}} one of these would be a meeting in the state of [[Mdama]]. It was here that he announced that he no longer felt he was an Arbiter, but simply a [[Kaidon]]. He told the elders that if any of them disagreed with him strongly enough, they could attempt an assassination as per Sangheili tradition.{{Ref/Novel|Gla|Chapter=2}} | Thel acted as a voice of reform to the Sangheili, uniting the keeps under a new planetary government, the [[Swords of Sanghelios]]. Returning to his [[Sanghelios|homeworld]], he planned to visit each state to make his case for permanent peace with the [[human]]s they had battled for so many years;{{Ref/Novel|Gla|Chapter=5}} one of these would be a meeting in the state of [[Mdama]]. It was here that he announced that he no longer felt he was an Arbiter, but simply a [[Kaidon]]. He told the elders that if any of them disagreed with him strongly enough, they could attempt an assassination as per Sangheili tradition.{{Ref/Novel|Gla|Chapter=2}} | ||
These reforms did not meet with universal approval. By January 2553, there was great dissent among disparate Sangheili parties, especially from the more devout believers in the Forerunners' divinity. Some, such as [[Avu Med 'Telcam]] and his [[Servants of the Abiding Truth]], saw the Arbiter as a [[Treason|false]] leader that has betrayed their pre-Covenant worship of the [[Forerunner]]s and sought to preemptively strike at humanity, fearing they would retaliate for the war. Additionally, many devout believers regarded Thel a "false Arbiter", stating that his very existence was heretical as he did not sacrifice himself | These reforms did not meet with universal approval. By January 2553, there was great dissent among disparate Sangheili parties, especially from the more devout believers in the Forerunners' divinity. Some, such as [[Avu Med 'Telcam]] and his [[Servants of the Abiding Truth]], saw the Arbiter as a [[Treason|false]] leader that has betrayed their pre-Covenant worship of the [[Forerunner]]s and sought to preemptively strike at humanity, fearing they would retaliate for the war. Additionally, many devout believers regarded Thel a "false Arbiter", stating that his very existence was heretical as he did not sacrifice himself the battle as was traditional of Arbiters in the Covenant. Others opposed 'Vadam not on religious grounds but due to his alliance with humanity, considering the notion of peace with the humans hopeless and that they could not be trusted.{{Ref/Reuse|wp thel}} Thel argued with logic, they had not only failed to defeat humanity in the end, but attacking them would bring Sanghelios to ruin after the sundering of the Covenant had left their people without the technical expertise to replace lost warships, or maintain their own infrastructure. | ||
In the midst of these events, the [[Office of Naval Intelligence]] secretly assisted 'Telcam in creating an insurrection against 'Vadam, in order to keep the Sangheili divided and prevent them from threatening the UNSC.{{Ref/Novel|Gla|Chapter=1}} | In the midst of these events, the [[Office of Naval Intelligence]] secretly assisted 'Telcam in creating an insurrection against 'Vadam, in order to keep the Sangheili divided and prevent them from threatening the UNSC.{{Ref/Novel|Gla|Chapter=1}} | ||