While the British media has covered President Obama and David Cameron's discussions about Afghanistan - among other subjects - exhaustively, they have shown less interest in a ground-breaking international conference organised by the Afghan government in Kabul this week.
In the country itself, emerging media outlets have been watching with interest.
In the last nine years, under President Karzai, the country's media market has grown. Afghanistan today has more than 500 print publications - both state and private newspapers and magazines. And there are more than 20 state and private television stations and 50 radio stations.
But how much editorial freedom do they enjoy?
Hasht-e Sobh ("Daily 8am"), a private, secular paper, leads on the Kabul conference, questioning whether many of the pledges given at it will ever be fulfilled.
The Daily Afghanistan (above) is more positive in tone, quoting President Karzai's pledges to end corruption.
The English-language Daily Outlook Afghanistan, part of the same group as the Daily Afghanistan, describes itself as "The Leading Independent Newspaper".
Its report of the Kabul conference highlights the promise of continuing Western commitment to Afghan women as military withdrawal is being discussed: "[Hillary] Clinton and European Union foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton told Afghan women leaders in Kabul that the West will not allow Afghanistan to return to the days of Taliban rule, when women's rights and issues were severely restricted and ignored."
The paper includes cartoons which, tentatively at least, poke fun at the Kabul establishment. So there's a gentle swing at democracy (above): the notice on the desk says "lower house of parliament" and the empty seats suggest there's not much going on.
In an unstable province like Nangarhar, where Tora Bora is located, there is now a media club and television station - although criticism of the government or the Taliban is still less likely to be heard from places like that than from the capital.
And with the division of Afghan society on political and ethnic lines, most publications air their direct or in-direct support for one side or the other ... just like British newspapers.
