Friday, August 14, 2009 - 8:47 AM

Armistice with the armed
Some
Taliban chiefs have reportedly agreed to allow Afghan army and police
forces to secure polling centers for next Thursday's presidential
election, in a secret deal brokered by incumbent Afghan president Hamid
Karzai's controversial brother, Ahmed Wali Karzai (The Guardian). It is unknown whether the ceasefires will be in effect near polling stations where President Karzai's opponents are popular.
Wali
Karzai responded to reports that British forces recently seized tons of
opium from his ranch in Kandahar by claiming it was a political attack
aimed at hurting his brother before the August 20 election (Reuters).
Ashraf
Ghani, one of three primary candidates in the presidential race, seeks
to gain on President Karzai and Dr. Abdullah Abdullah by reaching out
to young people, women, and the poor using the internet, student
volunteers, and the media (New York Times).
Ghani, a former finance minister under Karzai, is still probably an
outsider in the race, but he is the most educated and is widely
respected by Western diplomats.
Abdullah rising
Polling released today shows that as of mid-July, 44% of respondents
would vote for Hamid Karzai if the Afghan presidential election were held today, up from
31% in May (International Republican Institute,
58 pp, pdf). Abdullah Abdullah is up to 26% from 7%, and 6% would vote
for Ashraf Ghani, up from 3% in the last poll. Another longshot
candidate, the populist reformer Ramazan Bashardost, polled at 10%, up
from 3% in May.
If
the election were just between Karzai, Ghani, And Abdullah, they would
get 49%, 32%, and 11% of the vote, respectively. None of the candidates
has reached the 50% mark needed to avoid a runoff election, according
to this polling. Profiles of the contenders can be found here (Foreign Policy).
The
United States, in preparation for working with Karzai if he wins the
election, has floated the idea of a "shadow prime minister" to help
with the widespread corruption in Karzai's government (Washington Post).
Former
Afghan president and Abdullah supporter Burhanuddin Rabbani survived a
Taliban attack on his convoy in the comparatively calm province of
Kunduz in northern Afghanistan (Pajhwok Afghan News). Taliban insurgents claimed it is their goal "to turn Kunduz into another Helmand for foreigners" (Al Jazeera).
An uphill battle
The
United States is starting a $300 million effort to give micro-grants to
Afghans to persuade them to grow crops other than poppy, the flower
that is used to manufacture opium (Wall Street Journal).
But it is a challenge: last year, the average poppy farmer in southern
Afghanistan made nearly $3,000 more than his licit neighbor.
No troops for you!
U.S.
Secretary of Defense Robert Gates said that top American commander in
Afghanistan Gen. Stanley McChrystal's upcoming review of the war effort
will not include a request for more troops, as was rumored (Washington Post).
Secretary Gates expressed concern that additional boots on the ground
could fuel anti-U.S. sentiments in the region, but didn't rule out the
possibility that Gen. McChrystal might request more troops in future
assessments (Los Angeles Times).
Can't buy me love
Seventy
percent of Pakistanis view the Taliban unfavorably, up from 33 percent
last year, according to polling released yesterday (Pew Global Attitudes Project,
54 pp, pdf). The poll, conducted in mostly urban areas in late May and
early June, also found that about a third of Pakistanis see drone
strikes like the one last week that reportedly killed the leader of the
Pakistani Taliban, Baitullah Mehsud, as necessary and only sixteen
percent of Pakistanis have a favorable opinion of the U.S.
Happy Birthday Pakistan!
Today is Pakistan's 62nd Independence Day (Voice of America).
To celebrate, President Asif Ali Zardari announced a series of
political, judicial, and administrative reforms and lifted a ban on
political activity in the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (Dawn).
Wanted: Huge parking garages
Britain
is having troubling finding the extra facilities necessary to transport
and park additional helicopters for British troops at NATO bases in
Afghanistan (Daily Telegraph). More helicopters may help cut down on troop deaths caused by roadside bombs.
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