A 5,000-Year First

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  • John Ashcroft
    Veteran
    • Jan 2004
    • 2127

    A 5,000-Year First

    KABUL--More than 10 million Afghans have the opportunity to cast ballots for president today, in the first direct election for head of state in the nation's 5,000-year history.

    Three years ago, few predicted that Afghans could reach this historic milestone. Yet with the world's assistance, they have seized the moment and are now poised to take another major stride toward joining the ranks of the world's democratic nations.

    After the fall of the Taliban, Afghanistan faced enormous challenges: the lack of a legitimate political system, the existence of warlords with private militias, the absence of effective national institutions--and desperate poverty. Though none of these problems have been fully overcome, significant progress is now being made against all.

    Step by step, the Afghans are rebuilding an effective state and political system. At last year's Constitutional Loya Jirga (political assembly), they approved the most progressive constitution not only in Afghan history, but also in the Islamic world. At the loya jirga, all political groups accepted a set of rules for deciding who governs, as well as on the limits of state power. And all ethnic groups--Pushtuns, Tajiks, Uzbeks, Hazaras and others--are fully vested in the constitutional process to elect the president, the parliament, and provincial and local councils.
    Afghans, with the support of the international community, are breaking the back of warlordism. Customs revenues increasingly flow to the national government, rather than to the pockets of regional strongmen. President Hamid Karzai has appointed new governors and police chiefs in most of the country's provinces. He has removed leaders with private militias from positions of military command or transferred them away from the regions in which their personal networks and bases of power were entrenched.

    Most of the heavy weapons in the country--and all of those in the capital of Kabul--have been cantoned under the control of the Afghan National Army (ANA). A national agreement on the demobilization of militias has resulted in about 15,000 fighters--about one-third of the total--returning to civilian life and will see all militias disbanded by the middle of next year.

    The job is not done, but the days of those who have conducted themselves as warlords are numbered. The warlords know it. The sun is setting on their way of life. Some seek to reform their ways, cutting their ties with the dying institution of private militias and looking to find their place in emerging national institutions. Those who do not reform ultimately will have no place of power or prestige in the new Afghanistan.

    At the same time, Afghanistan's national institutions are taking shape. The Afghan National Army now numbers more than 15,000 troops, with deployments underway and regional commands being established in every region.
    Progress is accelerating toward the goal of a 70,000-troop force. Average Afghans often say, "Where the ANA goes, stability follows." More than 28,000 members of the national police have undergone initial training and equipping. The Afghan government has launched a program to rebuild its administrative capacity in the more than 350 district centers.

    Year-on-year progress in state building has been significant. Though much remains to be done, momentum is clearly gathering.

    Economically, Afghanistan has experienced a peace dividend of growth rates in the legal economy exceeding 15% for three years. Inflation is low, and the new currency is maintaining a stable exchange rate. Several banks have started doing business in Kabul and other cities. Agricultural production is increasing steadily. Thousands of new small businesses have opened.

    The rebuilding of the country's primary roads--led by the U.S.-Japanese-Saudi work on the Kabul-Kandahar-Herat highway--is well under way. The ring road and the links to regional networks, all of which are scheduled for completion in the next three years, will recreate the Afghan land bridge between Central Asia, South Asia and Southwest Asia, and re-establish a historic market that now accounts for more than $4 trillion.

    The best market test to understand how Afghans view the future is the fact that 3.3 million refugees have returned from Pakistan and Iran since 2002--the largest voluntary repatriation in history.

    OK, this deserves repeating...

    The best market test to understand how Afghans view the future is the fact that 3.3 million refugees have returned from Pakistan and Iran since 2002--the largest voluntary repatriation in history.

    These refugees would not return unless they believed the quality of life for their families is better in Afghanistan.

    While a positive trajectory exists in all of these areas, Afghans and their friends know that challenges remain.
    The remnants of the Taliban and other terrorist organizations continue to conduct a low-grade insurgency from sanctuaries in neighboring countries. The explosion of opium production will need to be reversed in coming years, through concerted action to suppress production and provide alternative livelihoods.

    In speaking with Afghans, they say that life is immeasurably better than under the Taliban, and that they are profoundly grateful for the help received from the United States and the rest of the world. However, we all know that, to succeed fully in Afghanistan, we must sustain the positive momentum developed to date for at least five years.

    If we do so, Afghanistan will realize its enormous upside potential, both by improving the lives of a people who have suffered immense tragedy for a quarter-century, and by consolidating a landmark victory in the war against extremists and terrorists. This will be a major step toward the necessary political transformation of the wider region.

    Link: here
  • ELVIS
    Banned
    • Dec 2003
    • 44120

    #2
    I sense a pessimistic FORD post comming on...

    Comment

    • Big Train
      Full Member Status

      • Apr 2004
      • 4011

      #3
      As well as a 5 Star for JA>..

      Comment

      • FORD
        ROTH ARMY MODERATOR

        • Jan 2004
        • 58759

        #4
        And now, for the REAL story.......

        Afghan Opposition Alleges Election Fraud
        Sat Oct 9, 11:28 AM
        By PAUL HAVEN, Associated Press Writer

        KABUL, Afghanistan - Afghanistan's historic presidential election turned sour Saturday when all 15 candidates opposing U.S.-backed interim President Hamid Karzai withdrew in the middle of voting, charging the government with fraud and incompetence.

        In the end, faulty ink _ not Taliban bombs and bullets _ threatened three years of painstaking progress toward democracy. The opposition candidates claimed the ink used to mark people's thumbs rubbed off too easily, allowing for mass deception.

        Electoral officials rejected opposition demands that voting be stopped at midday, saying it would rob millions of people of their first chance to directly decide their leader, and the joint U.N.-Afghan panel overseeing the election would rule later on the vote's legitimacy.

        But the controversy nonetheless cast a pall over what had been a joyous day in Afghanistan. Millions of ethnically diverse Afghan voters crammed polling stations for an election aimed at bringing peace and prosperity to a country nearly ruined by more than two decades of war. Men and women voted at separate booths in keeping with this nation's conservative Islamic leanings.

        Karzai _ who is widely favored to win _ said the fate of the balloting was with electoral panel, but he added that, in his view, "the election was free and fair ... it is very legitimate."

        Karzai, it should be noted, is a former employee of UNOCAL Oil and a BCE puppet

        "Who is more important, these 15 candidates, or the millions of people who turned out today to vote?" Karzai said. "Both myself and all these 15 candidates should respect our people _ because in the dust and snow and rain, they waited for hours and hours to vote."

        Even if the vote is ultimately validated, Karzai's ability to unite this nation, fight rampant warlordism and crush a lingering Taliban insurgency in this nation of an estimated 25 million people might be fatally compromised if his opponents refuse to accept the results and insist that his rule is illegitimate.

        Can't Junior send the Felonious Florida Five over to help him out?

        Taliban rebels got into a skirmish with U.S. troops that left at least 25 insurgents dead, and managed to kill three Afghan policemen accompanying ballots back to a counting center after the vote. Eight more police and two civilians died when their vehicles ran over mines.

        But the rebels did not muster anything approaching the massive attack they had threatened to derail the election.

        The boycott was a blow to the international community, which spent almost $200 million staging the vote. At least 12 election workers, and dozens of Afghan security forces, died in the past few months as the nation geared up for the vote.

        The chaos also threatened to become part of the debate in the U.S. presidential campaign. President Bush has held Afghanistan up as an example of flourishing democracy and a precursor to elections his administration insists will move forward in January in Iraq, despite continuing violence there.

        In St. Louis, the president exulted in the Afghan vote as a "marvelous thing" and said his administration should receive at least partial credit.

        "Freedom is powerful," Bush told a Republican breakfast fund-raiser. "Think about a society in which young girls couldn't go to school, and their mothers were whipped in the public square, and today they're holding a presidential election."

        It was a starkly different scene in Kabul, where the opposition candidates met at the house of Uzbek candidate Abdul Satar Sirat and signed a petition saying they would not recognize the vote results.

        Sirat, an ex-aide to Afghanistan's last king and a minor candidate expected to poll in the low single-digits, said all 15 challengers to Karzai agreed to the boycott.

        "Today's election is not a legitimate election. It should be stopped and we don't recognize the results," Sirat said. "This vote is a fraud and any government formed from it is illegitimate."

        Islamic poet Abdul Latif Padran, another minor candidate, said, "Today was a very black day. Today was the occupation of Afghanistan by America through elections."

        Election officials acknowledged that workers at some voting stations mistakenly swapped the permanent ink meant to mark thumbs with normal ink meant for ballots but insisted the problem was caught quickly.

        "Halting the vote at this stage is unjustified and would deny these people their right to vote," said Ray Kennedy, vice chairman of the joint U.N.-Afghan electoral panel. "There have been some technical problems but overall it has been safe and orderly."

        Kennedy said it could take time for the electoral body to reach a decision on the vote's legitimacy. Initial results were not expected until late Sunday or early Monday, and anything approaching a full count could take two weeks.

        About 10.5 million registration cards were handed out for the election, a staggering number that U.N. and Afghan officials say was inflated by widespread double registration. Organizers had argued that the indelible ink would prevent people from voting twice.

        A 13-member U.S. observer team from the bipartisan International Republican Institute described the polls as "a triumph for the Afghan people."

        "It is not surprising that some of the candidates are raising the question (about the ink)," said former U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Bernard Aaronson, the team's co-leader. "Perhaps some of those who don't do so well are trying to provide an excuse for why they didn't do so well."

        Bernard Aaronson? Were the Afghans on acid when they voted??

        The European Union and the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe sent observer missions as well.

        U.S. Ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad arrived at the opposition camp to meet with Sirat, making no comment other than to say he was there "only to help."

        Khalizad is also a UNOCAL employee and a PNAC signator. Just who you want in charge of elections....

        Khalilzad, a naturalized U.S. citizen born in Afghanistan, has been widely criticized for perceived favoritism for Karzai and is seen by many Afghans as a puppet-master. Afghans gathered outside the house joked that a resolution to the crisis was near because "the big man has arrived."

        Later, the ambassador issued a statement calling the elections "a profound success." He said initial indications pointed to turnout that was "extraordinarily high."

        "We recognize that some allegations remain and that there should be a process to address these allegations through a thorough and transparent investigation," Khalilzad said.

        But he also warned, "For Afghanistan to win, the losers in the election should not undermine the achievement of the Afghan people."

        The election was supposed to offer a stark contrast to Afghanistan's many forms of imposed rule in the past 30 years _ monarchy, Soviet occupation, warlord fiefdoms and the repressive Taliban theocracy ousted by the U.S.-led invasion following the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.

        "I am old, but this vote is not just for me. It is for my grandchildren," said Nuzko, 58, a widow who stood in line at a Kabul voting station. Like many Afghans, she uses only one name.

        "I want Afghanistan to be secure and peaceful."

        ___

        Associated Press reporters Stephen Graham in Kandahar, Burt Herman in Mazar-e-Sharif and Amir Shah and Daniel Cooney in Kabul contributed to this report.
        Copyright 2004 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
        Last edited by FORD; 10-09-2004, 08:55 PM.
        Eat Us And Smile

        Cenk For America 2024!!

        Justice Democrats


        "If the American people had ever known the truth about what we (the BCE) have done to this nation, we would be chased down in the streets and lynched." - Poppy Bush, 1992

        Comment

        • ELVIS
          Banned
          • Dec 2003
          • 44120

          #5
          Wha'd I tell ya...

          Comment

          • John Ashcroft
            Veteran
            • Jan 2004
            • 2127

            #6
            I wonder if he'd consider the reelection of Abraham Lincoln as illegitimate, considering voting was anything but perfect during the chaos of the Civil War...

            Then again, his party is that of Robert KKK Byrd, so who knows?

            Comment

            • FORD
              ROTH ARMY MODERATOR

              • Jan 2004
              • 58759

              #7
              Originally posted by John Ashcroft
              I wonder if he'd consider the reelection of Abraham Lincoln as illegitimate, considering voting was anything but perfect during the chaos of the Civil War...

              Apparently John Wilkes Booth didn't think so.
              Eat Us And Smile

              Cenk For America 2024!!

              Justice Democrats


              "If the American people had ever known the truth about what we (the BCE) have done to this nation, we would be chased down in the streets and lynched." - Poppy Bush, 1992

              Comment

              • ELVIS
                Banned
                • Dec 2003
                • 44120

                #8
                FORD, The John Wilkes Booth of the New Millenium...


                Comment

                • FORD
                  ROTH ARMY MODERATOR

                  • Jan 2004
                  • 58759

                  #9
                  Don't talk like that... I don't need the BCE hacking my computer again.
                  Eat Us And Smile

                  Cenk For America 2024!!

                  Justice Democrats


                  "If the American people had ever known the truth about what we (the BCE) have done to this nation, we would be chased down in the streets and lynched." - Poppy Bush, 1992

                  Comment

                  • Big Train
                    Full Member Status

                    • Apr 2004
                    • 4011

                    #10
                    I printed that last post out and framed it..hell, it may become my new sig.!!!!!!!!

                    Comment

                    • ODShowtime
                      ROCKSTAR

                      • Jun 2004
                      • 5812

                      #11
                      Re: A 5,000-Year First

                      Originally posted by John Ashcroft
                      KABUL--More than 10 million Afghans have the opportunity to cast ballots for president today, in the first direct election for head of state in the nation's 5,000-year history.
                      Link: here
                      JA, all bullshitting aside, I think we can all agree that this poor country deserves a break and hopefully they can have some stability. Getting invaded by the USSR and the USA is some shit!

                      Can anyone tell me the economic reason why we can't just buy all the poppy harvest from the farmers and burn it? With the funds, they could slowly evolve to normal foodstuffs or at least just make hash.

                      Wouldn't that solve the problem?
                      gnaw on it

                      Comment

                      • ELVIS
                        Banned
                        • Dec 2003
                        • 44120

                        #12
                        Originally posted by FORD
                        Don't talk like that... I don't need the BCE hacking my computer again.

                        Comment

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