Revision 159084808 of "Computer Assisted Biologically Augmented Lifeform" on enwiki''CABAL redirects here, for the type of secret society please see [[Cabal]]''
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<!-- Commented out because image was deleted: [[Image:Cabal.jpg|right|thumb|200px|CABAL in the Firestorm expansion of Tiberian Sun]] -->
The '''Computer Assisted Biologically Augmented Lifeform''' ('''CABAL''') was a sinister and highly advanced [[artificial intelligence]] in the [[Command & Conquer: Tiberian Series|Tiberian Series]] of [[Command & Conquer]] [[video games]], which, as its name implies, was augmented by numerous human beings who were kept artificially alive within [[Stasis (fiction)|stasis]] tubes and whose [[Human brain|brains]] had been integrally linked to, and [[synchronized]] with, the AI's system core. CABAL was used by the Brotherhood of Nod as their tactical and logistical console throughout the [[Command & Conquer: Tiberian Sun|Second Tiberium War]], and it also acted as the networked command hub for the Brotherhood's Tiberium-based cyborg programme. Although essentially gender-neutral, as it was primarily an artificial entity, CABAL was always portrayed as male in both virtual appearance and voice.
==Origin==
CABAL's origin is kept unknown by the designers of the game. To give the story more depth there are some in-game speculations. with some speculation placing it to be based on a combination of reverse-engineered [[Scrin#The Scrin|Scrin]] technology and a captured [[GDI]]'s [[Electronic Video Agent|EVA]] unit. It was first acquired by the Brotherhood of Nod near the end of the [[Command & Conquer: Tiberian Dawn|First Tiberium War]]. When [[Global Defense Initiative|GDI]] commandos stormed [[Kane (Command & Conquer)|Kane's]] temple (last mission in Renegade), it could be heard malfunctioning from the severe damage the Temple had incurred from the [[Ion Cannon]]. Between the First and [[Command & Conquer: Tiberian Sun|Second Tiberium War]]s, Nod agents rehoused CABAL's core somewhere in [[Egypt]]. It later assisted Kane's primary loyalists in the overthrowing of the [[Global Defense Initiative]]'s puppet Nod leader [[General Hassan#General Hassan|General Hassan]], an endeavor which would eventually result in the complete reunification of Nod for the first time since the Brotherhood's defeat at the end of the First Tiberium War.
CABAL's earliest known appearance (at the end of the First Tiberium War) was also at about the same time the construction of the large Scrin ship seen in the ''Tiberian Sun'' was completed. Additionally, in ''[[Command & Conquer: Renegade]]'' a crashed alien saucer is within walking distance of the Temple housing CABAL, its door logo a triangle composed of three smaller ones. In ''[[Command & Conquer: Tiberian Sun#Firestorm|Firestorm]]'', CABAL's core is animated as a similarly-composed [[pyramid]]. Seen from the sides, the resemblance is uncanny. Additionally, the earliest reference to CABAL in the ''Command & Conquer'' timeline seems to take place in the final level of ''Renegade''. While infiltrating Kane's temple, one can hear clips of a male Nod [[Electronic Video Agent#EVA|EVA]] unit malfunctioning. While most of these are simply the amusing "Intruder Alert. Alert Cancelled. Intruder Alert. Alert Cancelled. Intruder Alert. Intruder Cancelled. All intruders please report to the detention center", and "Attention: There's no business like show business. Don't throw stones in glass houses without proper protection. That is all.", one of these clips suddenly clearly states; "Computer Assisted Biologically Augmented Lifeform damaged. Please shut down all non-essential operations.".
==Purpose==
CABAL's in-game purpose was twofold: it served as a [[Command line interface|console]] interface between Brotherhood of Nod battlefield soldiers and their commanders worldwide, while at the same time utilizing the subsequent and vast network of [[Live television|live]] [[military espionage|intelligence]] to collate and devise complex [[Military strategy|strategies]] of its own, ultimately acting as a potent advisor and right-hand to those highest in command of the Brotherhood's forces. It also proved to have the capability of decoding and translating the Tacitus, an object considered to hold all the recorded knowledge on the mysterious [[Tiberium]] substance. CABAL's overall function was parallel to [[Global Defense Initiative|GDI]]'s [[Electronic Video Agent#EVA|EVA]] to a large degree, but was superior; the AI literally had a [[mind]] of its own and could both reason and act completely autonomously if it chose to. The EVA unit in comparison gives at best logically-formulated advice based on the sum of the information it is presented with, having no will or sentient mind of its own. For the player, there is no difference in [[Technology of the Global Defense Initiative#EVA|EVA]] or [[CABAL]], both characters are part of the story and exist only for the story and as decoration of the game.
CABAL's [[Personality psychology|personality]] was createn that of the stereotypical "Evil AI" present in many [[science fiction]] stories. In ''Tiberian Sun'' there are several hints of this and its disdain for humanity; it praised the firestorm defenses at GDI's [[Hammerfest]] base as technology "without flaw" while pointing out that "as always, the human element is riddled with imperfection". Its overall behaviour was that of a no-nonsense professional, and it showed little to no advance warnings of turning into the omni-malevolent [[villain]] seen in ''[[Command & Conquer: Tiberian Sun#Firestorm|Firestorm]]''. The only known exception to this is a mission briefing given by the AI in one of ''Tiberian Sun'''s earlier Brotherhood of Nod campaign missions, where it remarks that information gathered during said mission is "vital to my...your...movement". The AI can almost be described as a considerably more blunt form of [[Kane (Command & Conquer)|Kane]] himself, reasoning much like the man but doing away with the mysticism and riddles and getting straight to the point at hand. CABAL's amorality allowed it to consider actions without concern for any and all non-allies, fully including neutral forces and civilians alike. Indeed, at one point in the aforementioned Nod campaign of ''Tiberian Sun'', Slavik ordered CABAL to define what it called a "favorable outcome" to which the AI swiftly responded: "They all ''die''."
In the ''Firestorm'' expansion of ''Tiberian Sun'', it showed its true colours. CABAL's master plan forms the backbone of the game's initial missions, manipulating both the GDI and Nod into helping it carry out its plans. Its personality finally manifests, occasionally using [[Poetry|poetic]] speech, mocking people, maintaining a heavy dose of [[sarcasm]], speaking in a highly-[[Patronage|patronizing]] tone and having an overall air of superiority and arrogance. The "Evil AI" persona is complete in the last missions for both GDI and Nod; where every once in a while it can be heard laughing maniacally (usually just before a cyborg rush, an airstrike, or a missile launch). In multiplayer, the [[CABAL]] voice is stil present at the NOD side, where it originally belongs.
It should be noted that CABAL's virtual appearance changed from the game of ''Tiberian Sun'' to its expansion set of ''Firestorm''. In the original game, CABAL is a barely distinguishable, reddish-orange face maintaining a sinister appearance; a hardly-seen mouth, sharp and accented features around the eyes, and similarly-coloured pupils, [[Iris (anatomy)|iris]] and [[sclera]]. Its new appearance in the expansion set features a bald, blue head with fully-animated [[Electron shell|orbital shells]] for eyes.
==Game Involvement==
[[Image:CNC TS CABAL.png|left|thumb|200px|CABAL's original face as seen in ''Command & Conquer: Tiberian Sun'']]During the [[Command & Conquer: Tiberian Sun|Second Tiberium War]] CABAL was used as the Brotherhood its tactical, logistical and global communications coordinating console, as well as a potent type of advisor to [[Kane (Command & Conquer)|Kane]]'s top operatives under the command of Anton Slavik. After the end of the second war, [[Global Defense Initiative|GDI]] forces stationed at the defeated [[Cairo]] base deactivated and disassembled CABAL's core and were ordered to move it to [[Europe]] to a heavily defended base, in an attempt made by GDI to gain access to the Tacitus datamatrix. Upon reactivation, it immediately began putting its plan into place. This would swiftly result in the assassination of [[Tratos#Tratos|Tratos]], the seizure of the Tacitus device, the recovery of the Tacitus' secondary component, the orchestrated collapse of Nod's Inner Circle, and on. The AI proved capable of all this without anyone's knowledge of its overall plan straight up to the point where it itself openly severed contact with all involved parties, and revealed that it had built up a personal [[cyborg]] army. This led to an unholy alliance between Nod and GDI to destroy the renegade AI, which at first glance was successful. GDI received the Tacitus and Nod declared victory against the "single greatest threat to the survival of the Brotherhood".
After the final defeat of CABAL and its cyborg army, the ending for the Brotherhood of Nod campaign shows Kane's comatose yet living body hooked into a somehow intact CABAL systems core and being kept alive there in a [[Stasis (fiction)|stasis]] capsule alongside numerous other individuals, with Kane apparently recovering from his injuries sustained at the end of the second war due to the actions of [[Characters of the Global Defense Initiative#Commander Michael McNeil|Michael McNeil]]. The display then begins to continuously splice between the faces of CABAL and Kane, both of them referring to Kane's 'vision' with their disjointed individual voices. Through the two disjointed voices Kane can be heard referring to himself and his vision in the first person using the word ''my'', where CABAL is heard using the word ''your'' in an almost respectful manner. Finally, the two voices become synchronised, with CABAL suddenly speaking the words: "''Our'' directives must be reassessed.". In the Third Tiberium War, Nod uses a male EVA that according to Electronic Arts is "an off-spring of CABAL".
In ''[[Command & Conquer 3: Tiberium Wars]]'', the only in-game mention of CABAL is a short piece of GDI's intel describing the destruction of its last known bunker. However, in a trailer for the upcoming C&C3 expansion pack, Kane says that "CABAL was only the beginning.".
CABAL was voiced by [[Milton James]] in both ''Command & Conquer: Tiberian Sun'' and its expansion pack, ''[[Command & Conquer: Tiberian Sun#Firestorm|Firestorm]]''.
==Lands of Lore III==
CABAL also appears in [[Lands of Lore III]], another game produced by [[Westwood Studios]]. It appears as the end boss in the final portal world (which is a nuclear wasteland) in an abandoned NOD structure, and must be defeated in order to obtain the final shard of the shining path. CABAL has control of all the defense systems of the base, so to Copper, who comes from a world technologically equal to the Middle Ages, thinks that it is in fact a magician.
==See also==
* [[Electronic Video Agent]]
==Source==
[[Command & Conquer: Tiberian Sun]]<br />
[[Command & Conquer: Renegade]]<br />
All published by [[Electronic Arts]]<br />All content in the above text box is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike license Version 4 and was originally sourced from https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=159084808.
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