The Afghan presidential campaign narrowed to a field of eight men today after the grandson of the country's last king pulled out and endorsed a front-runner less than two weeks before the vote.
Mohammad Nadir Naim said he was withdrawing for the sake of national unity and throwing his support behind former Foreign Minister Zalmai Rassoul.
Naim, grandson of Afghanistan's King Zahir Shah who died in 2007, spent most of his life in exile and was never considered a strong candidate in the race.
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Rassoul; Abdullah Abdullah, who was Karzai's main rival in the disputed 2009 election; and Ashraf Ghani Ahmadzai, a well-known academic and former World Bank employee, are considered the front-runners but nobody is expected to win a majority, meaning a runoff will likely have to be held.
Afghan authorities are under pressure to prevent fraud from discrediting the credibility of the upcoming vote for a new president and provincial councils. There were widespread allegations of ballot stuffing and vote rigging five years ago.
The new leader will guide the country after international combat troops withdraw by the end of this year, leaving the country's security to the Afghan government. Karzai has refused to sign a security agreement with the United States that would allow thousands of foreign forces to stay in the country in a largely training and advisory role.
The US ambassador to Afghanistan said he did not expect Karzai to change his mind, but all the major candidates have assured him they will quickly sign the deal without demanding changes. The agreement was reached after months of negotiations and approved in December by a council of tribal elders and dignitaries.
"I'm confident that ... Each of them, should he become president, will sign the agreement as a first order of business," Ambassador James Cunningham told reporters at a briefing at the embassy in Kabul. "No one has hinted and nor would we agree to renegotiate the agreement."
"We've accepted the likelihood that President Karzai is not going to sign the agreement," Cunningham said. He also said he was hopeful a recent spike in violence, including deadly attacks on an Afghan election office and a luxury hotel frequented by Westerners, would not derail the vote.