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War weariness in the U.S. clouds battle against Taliban

WASHINGTON - The violence-scarred elections in Afghanistan provided a stage for the Taliban to show war-weary Americans and Afghans that it has rebounded and can strike - even after eight years of war.

WASHINGTON - The violence-scarred elections in Afghanistan provided a stage for the Taliban to show war-weary Americans and Afghans that it has rebounded and can strike - even after eight years of war.

For President Obama, the timing couldn't be worse.

With memories of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks dimming, Americans are tiring of the conflict. New polling shows a majority - 51 percent - of those surveyed now believe the war is not worth the fight, an increase of 6 percentage points in a month.

Obama's answer to the mounting skepticism is to say that, in a way, the war has just begun. The final push to wipe out America's Taliban and al-Qaeda enemies is not eight years old but really got started when he took office and ordered 17,000 more troops into Afghanistan.

In short order, he also installed a new commander and persuaded Pakistan to join in what yesterday he called a pincer movement to squeeze the enemy astride the Pakistan-Afghanistan border.

Obama's ability to recast the public debate at home - to get people to look past the cost and the deadly violence there - may matter more in the long run than who won or lost the Afghan presidency.

Obama has not wavered from his campaign pledge to take the fight to the Taliban and their al-Qaeda allies in Afghanistan and Pakistan.

He argues that the true danger to Americans lies in the towering peaks and vast deserts of those countries. The Bush administration, he says, wasted precious time, treasure, and blood in Iraq.

He argues that problems in both Afghanistan and Pakistan were allowed to fester, and as a result, the Taliban retook huge swaths of Afghanistan and al-Qaeda became comfortably ensconced on the Pakistan side of the mountainous border.

'Really focused'

"We've got to make sure that we are really focused on finishing the job in Afghanistan. But it's going to take some time," Obama said on a talk-radio program yesterday.

He gave a nod to the election, saying it "appears to be successful" despite the "Taliban's efforts to disrupt it."

Initial reports showed that 26 Afghans were killed in Taliban attacks on election day.

The Bush administration used earlier elections in Afghanistan and Iraq as evidence of success of its war policies. This White House isn't getting that boost.

The White House has been particularly reticent to talk about the Afghan vote, where the turnout appears to have been significantly lower than in the first-ever direct election of a president there, in 2004.

The administration is deeply aware of the country's long history of bloody uprisings against past leaders who were seen as place men for foreign powers.

While Obama took office having publicly expressed disappointment in President Hamid Karzai over his ineffectiveness and a background noise of corruption surrounding his administration, he has not spoken of his preference in the outcome of yesterday's vote.

Strategy review

Karzai's strongest challenger is his former foreign minister, Abdullah Abdullah, who may show well when the votes are counted because of heavier turnout in the ethnically Tajik northern part of the country where some of his family roots lie.

The turnout was spotty in the Pashtun south where Karzai has major support. If neither Karzai nor Abdullah - or any of the other 34 candidates - wins 50 percent in the first round, there will be a runoff. Final results will not be known until Sept. 3.

Regardless of the Afghan vote or the diminishing support for the war back home, a White House strategy review is due out in mid-September, and Gen. Stanley McChrystal, the U.S. commander in Afghanistan, is widely expected to press for a significant further increase in forces for his new counterinsurgency campaign.

Just three years ago the United States had 20,000 soldiers in the country. Today, the number is triple that and on its way to 68,000 by year's end when all of the 17,000 newly deployed are in place.

A Washington Post-ABC News poll this week showed, however, that only 24 percent of Americans support that move, with 45 percent saying the force should be decreased.

In a political paradox, backing for the war remains strongest among Republicans and conservatives, who support the conflict by 70 percent and 58 percent, respectively.