If the homepage of Pakistan's leading English daily, the Dawn, is any indication, at least one segment of Pakistan has been kept a close watch on the election.
Monitor correspondent Mahvish Ahmad reports that while average Pakistanis didn't much care who won, Pakistani officials and politicians (from right-wing Jamaat-e-Islami to sports hero-turned-politician Imran Khan) are quietly hoping that a cabinet reshuffle could soften an otherwise tense relationship between the two countries:
And rumors that Sen. John Kerry (D) fromMassachusetts could replace Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton have some officials hoping that the former's many-year relationship with Pakistan could pave the way for an even smoother cooperation.
“It is of course up to the US president to appoint the Secretary of State. However, if speculations about Kerry become true, then that would be a positive development – and a lot easier. Kerry has many friends in Pakistan. He obviously knows the region, and the ins and outs of our relationship,” says Fawad Chaudhury, a special assistant to Pakistan's prime minister.
(Read the rest of Monitor Correspondent Mahvish Ahmad's article on whether the election will change the US-Pakistan relationship)