On an unannounced visit to Kabul, US Secretary of State John Kerry made personal appeals to both candidates former Foreign Minister Abdullah Abdullah and former Finance Minister Ashraf Ghani Ahmadzai to understand the urgency of finding a resolution before the upcoming NATO summit in Wales on September 4, according to officials traveling with Kerry.
At that summit, NATO leaders are hoping to make decisions about their nations' roles in Afghanistan after the end of the year, when most combat troops will be withdrawn.
Once created, the Afghan government would convene a loya jirga, or nationwide assembly, to formalize the chief executive post as a prime minister, the plan envisions.
Kerry's visit comes as the election results are being audited in a process that he brokered last month but that had halted to mark the end the of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan in late July.
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Preliminary results of the poll showed Ghani Ahmadzai well ahead of Abdullah, but both sides alleged fraud. Kerry, who will see current President Hamid Karzai tomorrow before he leaves Afghanistan for an Asian security conference in Myanmar, met separately with Ghani Ahmadzai and Abdullah at the heavily fortified US Embassy compound in Kabul.
No details of the discussions were immediately available beyond the small talk the officials made while reporters and photographers were present. He will meet with the candidates again tomorrow.
"Oh, I know," Kerry replied.
Abdullah noted that Kerry has been "very busy" dealing with multiple crises around the world.