By Steve Hynd
1.3 million Afghan ballots have been tossed as obviously fraudulent by the UN's watchdog, reducing Karzai's share of the vote to only 48.3 percent. His main challenger, Abdullah Abdullah, actually increased his own share thereby, to 31.5 %.
Now, everyone is waiting to see whether Karzai's tame Afghan Independent Election Commission will accept the EEC'[s findings, whether Karzai will accept a run-off if they do, and whether his opposition will accept any of those decisions. "Afghan and international powerbrokers are reportedly filing in and out of the presidential palace, either trying to encourage Karzai to accept the decision or to make a power-sharing deal," according to J. Alexander Thier of the USIP.
Strangely, Karzai is keeping on acting as if he's President of Afghanistan despite the fact that constitutionally he isn't. The Western allies have their own obvious reasons for letting him do so.
So far, there have been nothing but peaceful protests from either side. Let's hope that doesn't change. But John Kerry was correct that it makes no sense to escalate U.S. troop numbers until such time as we discover whether there's going to be yet another insurgency in Afghanistan, and the White House was right to follow his lead on that.
If Obama is looking for an out this is it.
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