World | Afghanistan Stakes Massive Ahead of Obama Af-Pak Summit Zardari, Karzai in DC as Taliban surge in crumbling Pakistan By Jason Farago Posted May 6, 2009 6:02 AM CDT Copied Afghan President Hamid Karzai, flanked by House Minority Leader John Boehner and Speaker Nancy Pelosi, speaks to reporters on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday, May 5, 2009. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh) Barack Obama begins two days of talks with the leaders of Afghanistan and Pakistan today as his administration faces what may be its first foreign policy crisis: rising militancy in the Swat Valley that threatens to spread across the nuclear-armed nation. Obama and his team are expected to pressure Asif Ali Zardari, Pakistan's president, to intensify military efforts against the Taliban and reach out to political rivals to strengthen his fragile government, reports the Los Angeles Times. "We need to put the most heavy possible pressure on our friends in Pakistan to join us in the fight against the Taliban and its allies," said Richard Holbrooke, Obama's Af-Pak envoy. Talks with Hamid Karzai may be strained; the Afghan president has distanced himself from the US ahead of an election campaign, and Obama's administration is less keen on him than the Bush team was. Nevertheless, said one official, compared to its neighbor Afghanistan "looks like Canada." Read These Next Trump nominee who said he has 'a Nazi streak' withdraws. Trump reportedly wants a $230M payout from the DOJ. A young chess grandmaster has died unexpectedly. RFK Jr. offered his wife a fake separation. Report an error