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Counterinsurgency scorecard update : Afghanistan in early 2015 relative to insurgencies since World War II / Christopher Paul, Colin P. Clarke.

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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Paul, Christopher, author.
Clarke, Colin P., author.
Series:
Research report (Rand Corporation)
Research report
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Counterinsurgency--Afghanistan--Case studies.
Counterinsurgency.
Counterinsurgency--Afghanistan.
Asymmetric warfare--Afghanistan.
Asymmetric warfare.
Afghanistan.
Genre:
Case studies.
History.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (50 pages).
Place of Publication:
RAND Corporation 2016
Santa Monica, California : RAND Corporation, 2016.
Language Note:
English
Summary:
"Previous RAND research examined 71 insurgencies begun and completed worldwide between World War II and 2010 to analyze correlates of success in counterinsurgency (COIN). A key finding was that a case's score on a scorecard of 15 equally weighted good and 11 equally weighted bad COIN factors and practices corresponded perfectly with the outcomes of the cases analyzed. That is, the balance of good and bad factors and practices was always positive when the outcome was a COIN win (insurgent loss) and always negative when the outcome was a COIN loss (insurgent win). Using the scorecard approach as its foundation, a RAND study sought to apply the findings to the case of Afghanistan in 2015. The effort involved an expert elicitation in which experts were asked to make "worst-case" assessments of the factors to complete the scorecard for ongoing operations in Afghanistan. It was the third Afghanistan-focused exercise conducted with the scorecard, allowing rough comparisons with scores assigned by expert panels in 2011 and 2013. The 2015 consensus results indicated that Afghanistan continues to have a positive score, though its score is tied with the lowest-scoring historical wins. Two factors remained absent in Afghanistan in 2015 but essential to success in historical COIN campaigns: disrupting flows of tangible support to the insurgents and a demonstration (and improvement) of commitment and motivation on the part of the Afghan National Security Forces, the primary COIN force since the coalition drawdown. Despite some potentially positive developments resulting from the 2014 election of a new government in Afghanistan, it appears that the most promising end to the conflict will be a negotiated settlement in which the Afghan government makes some concessions to the insurgents and in which external powers, including the United States and Pakistan, help broker a satisfactory power-sharing agreement that brings greater stability to the country"--Publisher's description.
Contents:
Counterinsurgency Scorecard Update: Afghanistan in Early 2015 Relative to Insurgencies Since World War II
Findings from Previous Research on Insurgency
Counterinsurgency Scorecard
Endgames for Insurgencies: Getting to Negotiated Settlements
Scoring the Ongoing Conflict in Afghanistan
Using the Delphi Method
Building on Previous Scorecards
2015 Scorecard Results
Specific Factors in the Current Case
Notes on Factors Present or Absent in 2015 but Tenuous in the Future
2015 Results Compared with Previous Results and Analyses
What Improved?
What Declined?
What Stayed the Same?
Scorecard and Duration of Conflict
Summary of Scorecard Analyses
Prospects for a Negotiated Settlement
Conclusions and Recommendations
APPENDIX : Detail of the Expert Elicitation.
Notes:
Description based on: online resource; title from pdf title page (JSTOR, viewed June 5, 2020).
ISBN:
9780833093837
0833093835

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