The “Better Comparison”

Interesting verbiage, here. In the discussion of what Washington’s reading these days to try to figure out what to do next in Afghanistan, the focus seems to be on institutional lessons learned. While Josh makes a good point on what to read, the more interesting one, I think, is how some comparisons are being described as being more appropriate than others:

Sen. John McCain (R., Ariz.), long an advocate of the narrative detailed in “A Better War,” warned that while Vietnam may appear to have some parallels to Afghanistan, the better comparison is Iraq, where many of the same commanders now managing the Afghan war learned the value of surging more troops into a battle zone. “Vietnam fell to a conventional invasion of the North Vietnamese military,” Mr. McCain said. “The closest parallel to Afghanistan today is Iraq, the strategies that succeeded and the generals that succeeded.”

So, if we want to learn anything, we apparently need to find the case study that’s most similar or closely related to the one we’re interested in. Hmmm. Not sure how that’ll result in new knowledge. More like a recipe for reinforcing what we already think we know. Comparative case studies can certainly help establish generalizable observations, but that doesn’t mean they have to have identical characteristics.

Omnivore 08/10/09

Afghanistan and Pakistan at the SFRC, Katherine Tiedemann, AfPak Channel/Foreign Policy

Obama Meeting Advisers Amid Debate on Afghan Policy, Peter Baker & Jeff Zeleny, New York Times

An “Exhilarated”, “Invigorated” al Qaeda? Maybe Not, Michael Crowley, The Plank/The New Republic

Afghan Taliban Say They Pose No Threat to the West, Sayed Salahuddin, Reuters

Deep Denial: Why The Holocaust Still Matters, Michael B. Oren, The New Republic

Stone Circle Suggests Stonehenge Part of Burial Complex, Moni Basi, CNN

Scientists Discover Massive Ring Around Saturn, CNN

Old Wars, New Wars, Heidi Schaefer, Heidischaefer.net

Stolen Afghan Artifacts on Display in Kabul

This is good news, I think:

KABUL, Afghanistan — On most days, the news from Afghanistan involves something exploding. Which is why Tuesday was such a surprise: instead of bombings, it brought the unveiling of stolen treasures, some as old as the Bronze Age.

The National Museum was celebrating the return of about 2,000 artifacts that had been smuggled into Britain over the years of war in Afghanistan. British authorities confiscated the smuggled items and, after several years spent figuring out where the artifacts had come from, sent them back to Afghanistan in February.

The pieces were on public display for the first time on Tuesday.

Read the rest here.

O’Hanlon Elaborates on McChrystal

I took a swipe at Michael O’Hanlon last Friday on the AfPak Channel, as did a few others elsewhere, for his cursory comments on communication between President Omaba and General Stanley McChrystal. O’Hanlon elaborates in today’s WaPo. Go read.

Omnivore 06/10/09

Surgical Strikes Shape Afghanistan Debate, NYT, At War/New York Times

Afghan War Units Begin Two New Efforts, Yochi Dreazen, Washington Post

Kabul Notes: A Journey Into Afghanistan, Bernard-Henri Levy, The New Republic

General Petraeus Has Prostate Cancer, Eric Schmitt, New York Times

Pakistan Index: Tracking Variables of Reconstruction & Security, Brookings Institute

New Rules To End Blogger “Payola”, Maggie Shiels, BBC News

Futurity Imperfect, Evan Lerner, Seed Magazine