UPDATED ON:
Saturday, January 03, 2009
10:05 Mecca time, 07:05 GMT
 
News CENTRAL/S. ASIA
Key Afghan supply route reopened
Pakistani troops are trying to restore order
in the tribal areas [EPA]

Pakistan has reopened the main supply route for US and Nato troops in Afghanistan after blocking it for three days during an operation against al-Qaeda and Taliban fighters blamed for repeated attacks on convoys in the Khyber Pass, an official said.

Authorities say the operation was a success, but a similar offensive in June failed to curtail attacks and was followed by a controversial peace deal with tribal elders in the northwest Khyber region that US officials say allowed fighters to regroup.

 

Tariq Hayat Khan, the top administration official in Khyber, said that the Pakistani operation would continue, but would not be close enough to the road through the Khyber Pass to disrupt traffic, allowing the supply route to reopen.

 

Khan displayed a large cache of weapons seized during the operation and said 43 suspected fighters had been arrested.

 

Securing routes

 

The US plans to deploy up to 30,000 additional troops to landlocked Afghanistan this year, further increasing the importance of secure supply routes through Pakistan, which deliver up to 75 per cent of the fuel, food and other goods used by Western forces.

 

The fighters have stepped up attacks against convoys passing through Khyber in recent months and have also ransacked terminals in the nearby city of Peshawar holding supplies intended for the Afghan army.

 

American officials say the attacks have not affected their ability to operate in Afghanistan, but have acknowledged they are looking for ways to improve security along the route and are investigating alternative ways to deliver supplies.

 

They have praised the Pakistani operation, which started Tuesday and used artillery and helicopter gunships to destroy suspected fighter hide-outs.

 

The US has also attempted to disrupt al-Qaeda and Taliban fighters on the Afghan border by firing missiles from unmanned aircraft.

 

A suspected US missile strike killed four fighters and wounded two others in the South Waziristan tribal area on Friday, the second in as many days in the lawless region.

 

Villager Yar Mohammed said the missile hit an abandoned school in the village of Medan.

 

The strikes have angered local residents and the Pakistani government, which says they are a violation of the country's sovereignty.

 

But the US has continued the air strikes in an attempt to stop the fighters from staging cross-border attacks against Western forces in Afghanistan.

 Source: Agencies
Feedback Number of comments : 4
 
yusaf
Afghanistan
03/01/2009
loyality?
usa has always treated pakistani soldiers as loyal dogs, no matter how loyal pakistan tries to be to usa - it cannot raise itself from the rank of a dog, doing usa bidding - killing its own people to appease its masters.

K. Aziz
United Kingdom
05/01/2009
Key Afghan supply route reopened
US has created a real mess in the world we live in today. The mightiest armies could not rid Afghanistan of Talebans, and Pakistani leaderships have bowed to the Americans. No matter what Pakistan does, it cannot please US or anyone else. Supplies should be cut to Afghanistan, killing of innocent civilians should be stopped everywhere. Afghans like Omar should remember the hand that fed them and shelter that was given to them by Pakistan when Soviets invaded it. Some people have short memories!

Umair Ahmed Shaikh
Pakistan
05/01/2009
Pakistan!
No matter what the Pakistan does, USA will never be satisfied with it. In fact, by taking part in the war against terror, Pakistan has created problems for itself. The only solution is to re-draft our foreign policy that should be free from US pressure. USA can only help Pakistan in its own destruction rather than any progress.

Omar
Afghanistan
04/01/2009
Pakistan
Pakistani army are cowards, they even can not defeat bunch of thieves, and smugglers. Pakistan has been a problem for Afghanistan for centuries. I wish Pakistan wouldn't exist, and Afghanistan would have been in peace along side of India as neighbor.

 
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