KABUL (Reuters) – Afghan security forces, backed by foreign troops, are “completely prepared” to secure elections this week, the president’s office said yesterday, despite soaring violence and a Taliban threat to disrupt the vote.
Saturday’s election is seen as a test of stability in Afghanistan before US President Barack Obama conducts a war strategy review in December that will examine the pace and scale of US troop withdrawals from July 2011.
President Hamid Karzai met senior Afghan and international security officials, including the commander of US and NATO forces in Afghanistan, General David Petraeus, his office said.
“According to a joint plan with international forces, Afghan security forces are completely prepared to secure the election and polling centers,” Karzai’s palace said in a statement, citing security officials at Monday’s meeting.
Karzai urged security officials to use “everything at their disposal” to secure the election, the statement said.
Violence in Afghanistan is at its worst since the Taliban were overthrown by US-backed Afghan forces in late 2001, despite the presence of some 150,000 foreign troops and around 300,000 Afghan soldiers and police.
The Taliban have denounced the poll as a “foreign process” and said they will attack international and Afghan troops during the election and urged voters not to participate.
In Washington, Obama held a nearly two-hour meeting with national security advisers about Afghanistan and Pakistan and was briefed about “preparations and challenges associated with the upcoming Afghan-led parliamentary elections,” the White House said in a statement.
Afghans will take the lead in securing polling sites, just as they did at least year’s presidential election.
The Taliban failed to completely disrupt that vote but attacks and threats of violence helped keep turnout low in some areas of the important Pashtun tribal belt in the south and east.
NATO and US troops will have a backseat role but will have quick reaction forces on standby.
Security and fraud are the major concerns for the vote.
Four candidates have already been killed and many more have been wounded, according to the United Nations and government officials.
Even more candidates, particularly women, have suffered intimidation and have received direct threats on their lives.
The fragility of Afghanistan’s security was further illustrated at the weekend when violent protests erupted around the country in reaction to plans by a small US church to burn copies of the Koran. The church’s pastor abandoned his plan.
Three people were killed during three straight days of demonstrations. The top UN envoy in Afghanistan, Staffan de Mistura, warned last week the protests had the potential to delay this week’s vote.