My problem is with the fact that the Aes Sedai think holding Sea Folk sisters in captivity is more important than retaining their secrets, that they will be outraged at the idea their "sisters" will be given a choice for the first time in their adult lives.
As for Nynaeve and Elayne thinking they gave away too much, sure, they only performed at the level of a normal Aes Sedai, which is a huge failure by their standards. Egwene, on the other hand, has no business holding them so strictly to account. On her own, she is not worthy to criticize their accomplishments, and as the Amyrlin, her reprimands should be by policy only, rather than personal disappointment. The policy, as you pointed out, is that the matter of knowledge and teachers is not significant enough to make a big deal over. The thing that WILL be a problem for the Tower is a wrong-headed, and even evil policy that the Tower owns everyone who has ever been written into the novice book, and they may not go home and live as they wish.
In the end, every statement we have about Egwene's reaction to the bargain seems to be about the political fallout. Which she completely shielded Elayne and Nynaeve from, rather than even thinking of allowing them to take the fall so her position would be safe.
That's exactly the point! She reams them out over political issues. As for "allowing them to take the fall so her position would be safe" in the first place, you are treating Egwene's refraining from a particular wrongdoing as an active good deed, when refraining from wrongdoing is the minimal expectation for everyone. Political power and position exist for the benefit of its constituency, not the politician. Egwene refraining from doing practical harm for political expediency is not choosing one good over another, she is morally equal to the politician who draws the line at embezzlement and misappropriation of public funds. That's all well and good, but that is the expected minimum, not a noble or heroic sacrifice! And in the second place, that's not even an option for Egwene. As Thom noted in LoC, Elayne & Nyaneve going down would take Egwene down with them. Throwing them under the bus is not in it for Egwene, because their shortcomings would reflect badly on her to a Hall that does not recognize their legitimacy. As Egwene herself admits to them the first day, she raised them for political advantages to herself. Their ability to help the world and the Light was purely a coincidental benefit next to her political agenda.
So Egwene is not even refraining from doing wrong by her friends, she is refraining from committing suicide to spite her friends. Whoop de do.
You mean the knowledge of TAR that Egwene and the Wise Ones taught them??
What knowledge was that? By Bair's own admission, they hardly taught Nynaeve & Elayne anything, and they were more interested in reining the pair in and preventing them from doing anything. Most of what Nynaeve & Elayne learned, aside from need-searching, they did practicing on their own on the trip to Salidar. It was not the Wise Ones' teaching that enabled Nynaeve to capture Moghedian, it was a skill she and Elayne honed on their own, inspired largely by Nynaeve's fear of Egwene's assault. The Wise Ones tried to make Nynaeve promise not to attempt anything on her own in TAR, which would have precluded finding the Bowl of the Winds, among other things. Meanwhile Egwene mocked Nynaeve's refusal to give the same false promise she herself had made, and then pretended outrage at the white lie she told Melaine to keep the Wise One from trying harder to curtail her individual explorations.
Not one of those things had to do with Nynaeve's skill in TAR. Why not add in her ability with tracking, and her preference for green and blue clothing in that list?
But they were things she accomplished in TAR. I'd rather learn from the woman who has actually done something, than the one with an admirable report card, and no achievements to speak of beyond tormenting a friend.
Uhh... that's quite some revising of the story. Nynaeve knew nothing of TAR before the Wise Ones taught her. In fact, they wanted to teach her more because they saw she could do well, but she refused them.
“Tolerance is the virtue of the man without convictions.” GK Chesteron
Inde muagdhe Aes Sedai misain ye!
Deus Vult!
*MySmiley*