Meanwhile, Jedi Knight Anakin Skywalker—Tano's former master who still believed her to be innocent—had conducted his own investigation which led him to Offee.
Although a few prominent members of the council, including Obi Wan Kenobi, Plo Koon and Yoda did believe in her innocence, it was of no use. The abandonment by her own kind left Ahsoka emotionally scarred. Everything she loved and stood for quickly crumbled and she realized that the Jedi were fickle and untrustworthy.
The fact of the matter is that Plo Koon, Obi-Wan, and possibly Yoda all believed Ahsoka was innocent, or at least found it hard to believe she was guilty. They kicked her out of the order because it was what the Senate wanted.
Desperate to clear her name, Ahsoka was captured, stripped of her Padawan status, and expelled from the Jedi Order. Her Master Anakin Skywalker, however, never stopped believing in his apprentice's innocence and uncovered the truth: Jedi Barriss Offee, Ahsoka's friend, was the real culprit.
Obi-Wan doesn't believe Ahsoka is guilty of these crimes, but he has a very hard time arguing politically that the Jedi Council shouldn't do what they do to her.
Ahsoka's departure haunted Yoda for some time afterward; he felt extremely guilty and remorseful, partly for refusing to stand by her and partly for placing her on the path that led to her departure from the Jedi Order. In fact, his guilt was so great that the Dark Side attempted to use it against him, but failed.
Meanwhile, Ahsoka learns something that terrifies her. She senses Anakin when she reaches out to the pilot — and Vader realizes that Ahsoka, his former Padawan, lives on.
Also, she felt Anakin's plan, but she had to do what was right for herself and not for him. Anakin had always struggled with abandonment even though he had left his mother willingly. Seeing Ahsoka leave was like a blow to the heart and his fear of loss is what Yoda and Obi-Wan feared would get the better of him.
They invited her to rejoin the Jedi Order, but after everything she went through and feeling betrayed by her Jedi superiors Tano refuses and leaves, to everyone's shock.
Did Anakin care for Ahsoka as much as he cared for Padmé? In my opinion, I think it's hard to compare Anakin's relationship with Padmé to his relationship with Ahsoka because the nature of the relationships are different: Anakin romantically loved Padmé, meanwhile he loved Ahsoka unconditionally like a sister/daughter.
Grand Admiral Thrawn is an Imperial officer who was first introduced to the Star Wars universe in Timothy Zahn's 1991 novel Heir to the Empire. The novel and its two sequels which — later known as the Thrawn trilogy — took place shortly after the events of Return of the Jedi.
The fifth season of 'Clone Wars' revealed that Ahsoka was not with the Jedi Order during the events of 'Revenge of the Sith' because she left the Jedi on her own accord after she felt betrayed by the Jedi Council. As such, fans thought she was away from the battlefield the entire time.
Did Darth Vader really have so much trouble fighting Ahsoka? Though Ahsoka put up a valiant effort, in the part of the fight we did see, Vader clearly had the initiative the whole time. It looked to me like he was steadily and inexorably overwhelming her with his sheer power, until finally forcing her off the ledge.
The trailer also introduces two new characters in Baylon Skoll (Ray Stevenson) and Shin Hati (Ivanna Sakhno), both of whom wield red-colored lightsabers and are clearly force sensitive.
When Ahsoka was arrested for the bombing of the Jedi Temple and for killing clones and Letta Turmond, she was held at the Jedi Temple. Admiral Tarkin contacted the Jedi Council and relayed the wished of the Senate — that Tano be expelled from the Jedi Order so that she could be tried by a military court.
The youngling clans would remain as one unit, living and training together, until the time came to go their separate ways as Padawan learners. The younglings who were not chosen to become Padawans were supervised by the Council of Reassignment.
Originally Answered: Did Darth Vader feel sad/regretful that he “killed” Ahsoka in rebels? No, as seen in Thrawn, Alliances, Anakin and Vader are completely different people. Vader despises Anakin for being weak, when he thinks of him, in his head, he refers to him as “the Jedi" and wants nothing to do with that past.
In Death Watch's camp, Ahsoka warned him that he was unwise to trust the Mandalorians. Mindful of their cover story, Lux quieted her by grabbing her and kissing her.
The Unwanted Padawan
Despite Obi-Wan's advice about how being a teacher was a privilege and obligation, Anakin wasn't into it. He was annoyed with Ahsoka from their first meeting. Anakin's reaction when Ahsoka said she was assigned to him was priceless.
You're still here? Excellent! Now Ahsoka did indeed attend Padme's funeral, but in secret. She couldn't stay away as Padme was one of her bestest friends during the clone wars.
Real answer: They made that movie before they invented the character Ahsoka Tano. Canon Answer: She had already left the Jedi order and although she was a part of his life, her story was parallel, but not part of Anakin's story in Revenge of the sith.
The story is Anakin was manipulated to the dark side by Palpatine based on fears of losing Padme and appeals to his desire power and agency, over his life and the galaxy as a whole. Part of me wonders why he believed/ trusted Palpatine to begin with.
Darth Vader taking the saber represents Anakin's love for his first spiritual child, Ahsoka. It echoes the way he addresses her by name in Rebels' “Twilight of the Apprentice,” letting Ahsoka know that her former master is still in there somewhere.
Tano abandoned the lightsabers for good after Order 66, the means by which the Sith engineered the fall of the Jedi, in order to fake her death to the new Galactic Empire, before eventually replacing them with a pair of white lightsabers upon joining the nascent rebellion.
After the Clone Wars and Order 66, Darth Vader always knew his former apprentice Ahsoka Tano was alive and that he would one day face her in battle - long before it happened in Star Wars Rebels. Ahsoka Tano unwittingly played a crucial role in Anakin Skywalker's fall to the dark side.