Engineering Review for Galen Walton Erso
Dual-faction engineering review for Galen Walton Erso — Imperial record and Rebellion intelligence assessment
Dr. Erso is among the most distinguished applied physicists in the Imperial research apparatus. His foundational work in kyber crystal energy synthesis at the Stellan Institute established the theoretical basis for the Celestial Power project and remains the essential reference for all subsequent energy-focusing research. Following a brief period of voluntary leave — COERCED CONSCRIPTION, SEE APPENDIX 7 — Dr. Erso returned to active Imperial service and has delivered the Stardust superlaser system ahead of projected timeline. His productivity under EXTREME DURESS AND FAMILY SEPARATION has been exemplary.
Exceptional. Dr. Erso solved problems that had defeated entire teams of Imperial researchers. His mastery of kyber crystal physics is without peer in the known galaxy. His work is precise, theoretically grounded, and reproducible. There are no technical errors in his deliverables. THERE IS ONE VERY DELIBERATE NON-ERROR.
Dr. Erso has been a cooperative and productive member of the Tarkin Initiative team. He has raised no formal objections to the project’s scope or application. He attends all required briefings. He has made no attempts to communicate with HIS DAUGHTER. MULTIPLE ATTEMPTS. ALL COVERT. ONE SUCCEEDED. outside parties. His loyalty to the Imperial mission is not in question at this time.
Thorough and meticulous. All schematics are filed, indexed, and stored at the Scarif data vault. Director Krennic has personally commended Dr. Erso’s documentation practices. The completeness of these records means the system can be fully understood by THE REBELLION. THIS WAS INTENTIONAL. THE DOCUMENTATION IS THE SABOTAGE. any qualified Imperial engineer.
Dr. Erso occasionally appears DEVASTATED fatigued. Recommend consideration of additional HOSTAGES wellness resources. Some members of his team have noted he seems TO BE DOING SOMETHING. WE DO NOT KNOW WHAT. SEE REBELLION FILE. contemplative. This is not considered a performance concern at this time.
Dr. Erso is the irreplaceable intellectual foundation of the Stardust Initiative. His continued presence at the Eadu facility is essential to ongoing operations and any future weapons development program. Director Krennic has requested he be considered for the Imperial Medal of IRONY Scientific Excellence.
This brief is filed under duress. We are still processing the full scope of what Galen Erso accomplished, alone, under active Imperial surveillance, over the course of approximately fifteen years. The analyst requests that this document be read slowly. What follows is not a standard asset assessment. It is an attempt to reconstruct the most consequential act of covert engineering in the history of the Rebellion — conducted entirely without our knowledge, by a man we did not know was working for us.
Extraordinary, and demonstrated twice over. He was technically capable enough to build the Death Star’s superlaser — a feat no one else in the galaxy managed — and technically precise enough to embed a specific, exploitable flaw that survived Imperial peer review undetected for years. Both achievements require the same depth of mastery. The flaw is not a shortcut. It is fine work. It had to be invisible to everyone except the person looking for it.
This category requires honest reckoning. Erso did not prevent the Death Star from being built. He could not. He made a calculated decision: build the weapon, embed the flaw, ensure the flaw can be found and used. This decision preserved his life long enough to execute the plan — but the Death Star destroyed Jedha and Alderaan before Yavin. Those deaths happened on a weapon he built. That the weapon was later destroyed does not erase them.
The ethical weight here is not assigned lightly. Erso made the only choice available to him under genuine coercion, and his long-game decision saved billions. But the rubric must account for what happened in the interim. The score reflects extraordinary moral courage alongside catastrophic interim consequence — both true simultaneously.
The most patient problem-solving in this series by an order of magnitude. He did not have the luxury of iteration or rapid prototyping. He had one chance, over fifteen years, to get it right — because a detectable failure would have ended the project and his life. He planned backward from the desired outcome (a rebel starfighter could destroy the station) through the physics (what flaw would allow that), through the engineering (how do you make that flaw invisible), through the documentation (how do you make sure someone finds it). Every step had to hold.
The defining category. Documentation was not incidental to Erso’s plan — it was the plan. The Scarif schematics exist because he made sure they would. The holographic message to Jyn exists because he recorded it. The transmission chain through Bodhi Rook exists because he built it. His documentation practice is the only reason Rogue One succeeded, the only reason the plans reached Yavin, the only reason Luke Skywalker knew where to fire. He wrote the manual to defeat his own weapon. That is the best documentation score this rubric will ever give.
He could not fail publicly. Any visible failure would have been fatal. What we can assess: he clearly encountered setbacks across fifteen years and navigated them without triggering Imperial suspicion. Andor-era records suggest early attempts to resist conscription and periods of genuine despair on Lah’mu. He did not collapse. He adapted. The plan survived him.
Operates in an entirely different register than any other engineer reviewed. He had significant Imperial resources — and zero freedom. His constraint was not budget or materials but total surveillance and the constant threat of death. He worked within the system so completely that the system handed him exactly the access he needed to destroy it. That is a form of resourcefulness the rubric was not designed to accommodate.
Galen Erso was not our asset. He was not debriefed, not trained, not contacted, not protected. He built his operation in isolation, under total surveillance, for fifteen years, and it worked. The Alliance owes him a debt it cannot repay because he is gone. The lesson for our intelligence apparatus is uncomfortable: we did not find him. He found us — through his daughter, through a pilot, through a hologram, through plans stored on a planet we had to die to reach. We should have been looking.
Galen Erso is the only engineer in this series whose greatest achievement is a thing he made worse on purpose. That reframing — deliberate vulnerability as the actual deliverable — maps directly onto real-world security engineering. The best penetration testers, red teamers, and security researchers think exactly like Erso: they build the system as specified, and simultaneously ask where the precise point of failure is that no one else will find. The difference is that Erso had no team, no safety net, no way to test his flaw before deployment, and the stakes were civilizational. What the story ultimately argues is that documentation saved the galaxy — not the X-wings, not the Force, not the heroics at Yavin. A man alone on a prison planet wrote down where the door was and made sure the right person found it. That is a lesson in technical communication that engineering schools should assign.
