Jonah Goldberg writes:
 The  Bush administration — and quite a few lifelong liberals — are determined to  convince the public that it is 1938 in Iran and Mahmoud Ahmadinejad is Hitler.  Or that it's 1917 and Osama bin Laden is a new Lenin. Others see Spanish Civil  Wars in Iraq or on Lebanon’s southern border. And I shudder to count up all  the folks who claim that Iraq is Vietnam...
Nonetheless, there are two problems with all this historical cherry-picking. The  first is our own collective ignorance about history. As a culture, we have a  tendency to look for our car keys where the light is good. Our usable past is  the past that is illuminated to us. One of the main reasons we leap to analogies  about World War II and the Cold War is that it’s the only history most of us  know....
But what if there are historical parallels lurking in the shadows of our  ignorance? What if the jihadists are more like the Muslim Barbary pirates made  famous in the Marine hymn with the line about “the shores of Tripoli”? Or  maybe they're more like the Thugees, an 18th century murder cult in colonial  India? Or the Panslavist Black Hand? ... The point is, we don’t know. But  surely the ocean of human historical experience cannot be summed up in terms of  the tributaries of Vietnam and Nazi Germany.
That's all very wise, but surely there is one other analogy to Iran lurking out there?
Iran is the new Iraq.
My published articles are archived at iSteve.com -- Steve Sailer
 
 
 
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