Secretary of State John Kerry has successfully brokered a deal between Afghanistan’s two rival presidential candidates.
In order to settle a dispute over the results of the country’s June 14 election runoff, the leading contenders, Abdullah Abdullah and Ashraf Ghani, agreed to abide by the results of a recount, which the United Nations will oversee.
“Both candidates have committed to participate in and abide by the results of the largest and most comprehensive audit,” Kerry said in Kabul, Afghanistan at a joint news conference, according to Reuters, just before midnight local time.
“Every single ballot that was cast will be audited,” Kerry added. Negotiations leading up to the agreement stretched out over the course of two days.
The contest’s deadlock has raised concerns about a smooth power transition in the Middle Eastern country at this rather precarious moment. The U.S. is currently withdrawing forces from Afghanistan after 12 straight years of war there. The country, meanwhile depends on foreign aid, with the U.S. being Afghanistan’s biggest foreign donor.









