Wednesday, October 21, 2009 - 5:33 AM
Second time's the charm?
Yesterday
morning, incumbent Afghan President Hamid Karzai capitulated to the
results of a U.N.-backed fraud investigation that dropped his share of
the troubled August 20 presidential ballot below the 50 percent margin
needed to avoid a runoff against his main challenger Abdullah Abdullah (Financial Times, New York Times, AP, AFP, Independent, Los Angeles Times).
U.S. President Barack Obama congratulated the Afghan president, though
the Taliban were less than thrilled, as a spokesman for the militant
group promised a wave of "different techniques" to disrupt the second
balloting, scheduled for November 7 and already presenting a host of
logistical problems for Afghan bureaucrats (McClatchy, AP, Times of London, Pajhwok).
Abdullah reportedly contacted Karzai last night and has agreed to take place in the second round election (Reuters).
Skeptics are concerned that a second round will be no less fraud-ridden
and dangerous than the first and worry that even if Karzai wins the
runoff, his government will still be tainted by the August 20 contest (AP, AP, Foreign Policy).
Efforts to get the two politicians to join forces are expected to
intensify, and while Abdullah has hinted he's open to the idea, Karzai
appears to have ruled it out (New York Times). A map of where fraud occurred in the first election is available here (New York Times).
In smoke-filled rooms
Sen.
John Kerry, among world leaders, was reportedly hard at work behind the
scenes convincing Karzai to accept a runoff, and Secretary of State
Hillary Clinton and Obama administration special representative to the
region Richard Holbrooke were both in touch with the man from
Massachusetts during four intense days of negotiations in Kabul (Wall Street Journal, Washington Post, Bloomberg, CNN).
British Prime Minister Gordon Brown also spoke with Karzai three times
in the last two days to encourage him to accept a second round (Telegraph).
Secretary
of Defense Robert Gates warned earlier today that another round of
elections won't simply solve all of Afghanistan's corruption and
governance issues, and U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki Moon told the BBC
that more than half of Afghanistan's election officials who had been
complicit in election fraud should get fired, and said to CNN's
Christiane Amanpour that they will be replaced before November 7 (AP, BBC, CNN, Reuters).
This
latest chapter in the never-ending election comes as yet another poll
finds flagging support for the war in Afghanistan; in a new Washington
Post-ABC News survey, only 45 percent of Americans approve of Obama's
handling of the situation in Afghanistan, down from 63 percent in
April, and the U.S. public is strongly and deeply divided on the issue
of troop strength, as 47 percent of those polled favor a buildup and 49
percent oppose it (Washington Post). The full poll results are available here (Washington Post).
A brazen blast
After
yesterday's double suicide bombing at an Islamic university in the
Pakistani capital of Islamabad, Pakistan has closed all schools and
colleges for at least five days (Dawn, Bloomberg, BBC, Daily Times). The university is expected to re-open on Monday (Geo TV).
The attack occurred in the midst of the Pakistani military offensive in
South Waziristan, which rages on with pitched battles over key towns in
the rugged tribal region and could cause as many as a quarter of a
million Pakistanis to become refugees (Wall Street Journal).
Security forces are reportedly gaining in the battle for Kotkai, a town
that is particularly symbolic because the current chief of the
Pakistani Taliban and the mastermind of the Taliban's campaign of
suicide attacks both hail from there (AP, Al Jazeera). Independent information from the region is not available, however.
The chief of Pakistan's powerful army, Gen. Ashfaq Parvez Kayani,
reportedly complained to top U.S. military leader Gen. David Petraeus
during the CENTCOM commander's recent visit to Pakistan that the U.S.
closed eight checkpoints on the Afghanistan/Pakistan boundary, four of
which border South Waziristan (Telegraph).
The closure was ordered after top U.S. and NATO commander in
Afghanistan Gen. Stanley McChrystal's strategy review assessed the U.S.
should focus on protecting population centers in lieu of remote
outposts, though a NATO spokesman insisted there was no gap in security.
Though
nationally public opinion in Pakistan has turned against the Pakistani
Taliban after months of brutal attacks, public and official reaction in
Punjab province is mixed toward the Army's efforts in northwest
Pakistan (Washington Post). Jane Perlez lays out some of the nuances behind the Pakistani Army's recent deals with two tribal commanders in Waziristan (New York Times).
Strikes some scores away
An
alleged U.S. drone killed at least three militants in a strike just
minutes ago in North Waziristan in a village called Spalaga on the
border with South Waziristan, the 44th drone strike in Pakistan this
year (AP). In part four of New York Times
reporter David Rohde's intense account of his seven month long
kidnapping by Haqqani militants in Pakistan, he described being nearby
the March 25 drone strike in Makeen, South Waziristan, and observed
that the strikes "created a paranoia among the Taliban" (New York Times). For a detailed analysis of the drones program, visit a newly-released report by the New America Foundation (New America Foundation).
The next generation
Thirty-one
women graduated last Sunday from a course training them to be midwives
in Jawzjan and Faryab, two northern Afghan provinces where they will be
employed (Pajhwok). The midwives completed 18 months of training financed by USAID.
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