The United States hopes that Pakistan would reopen its ground supply lines into Afghanistan “in the very near future,” a Pentagon spokesman said.
The spokesman said the US wants a relationship with Pakistan that overcomes obstacles of the recent past and wants to “reinvigorate” it going forward. “We are hopeful that in the very near future they will be reopened,” George Little, acting assistant secretary of defense for public affairs, told journalists at a Pentagon briefing. “They are important supply routes for us.” Little said of the ground lines of transportation that were banned by Pakistan in response to killing of its 24 soldiers in US war plane strikes on Salala border post on November 26 last year. Following the closure of Pakistani routes six months ago , the US logistics specialists quickly shifted to other means to supply the Afghanistan-based forces, but the routes through Pakistan remain the “most direct and most cost-effective.”
Little said the US continues to work with Pakistan. “We continue to work closely with the Pakistanis to renew our relationship that gets over some of the obstacles that we faced in the past,” Little said. The United States and Pakistan share common threats, concerns and interests, the assistant secretary said. “Terrorism is common concern that both the United States and Pakistan face,” he said. “The same terrorists that come after us go after Pakistanis and have been responsible for the deaths of thousands of Pakistanis.”
“We, at the end of the day, believe that we share common interests with Pakistan. The relationship, we believe, is getting to where it needs to be. And that’s why we’re committed to ongoing dialogue, not just on GLOCs (ground lines of communications) and on terrorism, but across the full range of security issues that we have common interest on.” Questioned if the administration has ruled out an apology in the November 2011 incident – that undermined the relationship – Little said the US had expressed deep regret in the wake of the incident.
“ I would reiterate what we said in December, and that is that we’ve expressed deep regret and extended our condolences to the Pakistani people, to the Pakistani government, and of course to the families of the loved ones who were lost and of course those who were injured in the incident as well. So we have been clear about expressing regret for that incident, and the goal now is to press ahead, move forward, and reinvigorate the relationship with our Pakistani partners.”
Very certainly Sir …
We already lost a million a day going into this 'supply route war' …
Please hurry up Sir – press ahead …
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