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Pakistan shuts NATO supply line.

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Pakistan shuts NATO supply line.

Bruce Loudon, South Asia correspondent | November 17, 2008

Article from: The Australian

PAKISTAN cut off the main NATO supply route into Afghanistan yesterday, citing Taliban and al-Qa'ida attacks on the Khyber Pass, the perilous mountain trail that carries most supplies into the war-torn country for the 35,000-strong coalition force.

Taliban fighters have been trying to strangle NATO's mission in Afghanistan by stepping up attacks on convoys in the Khyber Pass, and yesterday forced Pakistan to suspend all traffic along the route.

More than 350 trucks and oil tankers use the pass each day, carrying NATO supplies that have been shipped to the Pakistani port city of Karachi.

But government officials in Islamabad said last night the suspension of the important land route had become inevitable because of intensified militant activity in the Khyber Tribal Agency.

Any long-term closure of the road would make the problem of resupplying coalition troops in Afghanistan very difficult.

About 70 per cent of the fuel, clothes and food needed by the NATO forces is transported in civilian Pakistani trucks through the Khyber Pass, a vulnerable point in the long route from Karachi to Kabul.

The route is now too risky to transport weapons, and many supplies travel on the southern route from Quetta to Helmand.

The number of attacks on supply convoys is a military secret, but reports claimed they were occurring almost daily. Earlier this year, 42 oil tankers were destroyed in one attack.

The suspension of traffic along the highway came as the main Taliban commander in the area, Mustafa Kamran Hijrat, said he was determined to sever the coalition supply lines.

"We will continue to seize convoys carrying goods for NATO and American troops," he said. "We are waging a holy war, and we shall continue the struggle by every means."

The Taliban's tactics are similar to those used by mujaheddin guerillas in the 1980s, who crippled the Soviet army by attacking its supply convoys.

Commanders of the US-led NATO force in Afghanistan were stunned last week when Commander Hijrat's men captured a convoy of coalition supply trucks, and grabbed food supplies and several US Humvee armoured vehicles that were being carried in containers.

The militants were later seen driving around the Khyber Agency in the US Humvees. Attempts by Pakistan forces in the tribal belt to recover the armoured cars - or even to bomb them from the air and put them out of action - proved fruitless.

NATO commanders are looking at alternative land routes to bring in supplies through central Asia, using Kazakhstan as a base.

But the land route through Pakistan is preferred, because of the ability to ship military supplies into Karachi.

However, the use of the port is becoming more tenuous, with widespread fears about the extent to which the Taliban and al-Qa'ida have been building up their forces in the city.

In the past few days, an oil tanker bound for Afghanistan was attacked close to Karachi.

There are reports the UN is pulling its workers out of the Pakistani provincial capital of Peshawar, next to the Khyber Agency, because of fears about the worsening situation.

The UN workers were pulling back to Islamabad, a 90-minute drive from Peshawar. Other government and non-government aid agencies were also pulling back from Peshawar, which was described by Pakistan's leading newspaper The News yesterday as "the kidnapping capital of the world" and a "city under siege".

The newspaper said that in the past 10 months, 78 people had been kidnapped in Peshawar, including Afghanistan's ambassador-designate to Islamabad and an Iranian diplomat.
 
16 Nov, 2008

PESHAWAR: Pakistan will reopen a main supply route to western forces in Afghanistan on Monday, a week after militants hijacked more than a dozen trucks on the road through the Khyber Pass, a senior official said on Sunday.

A senior government administrator in Khyber, one of Pakistan's seven semi-autonomous tribal regions, told Reuters that truck convoys would start rolling again with armed escorts.

'Now they will be escorted by security personnel and vehicles,' Fida Mohammad Bangash, the deputy political agent for Khyber, told Reuters.

Most supplies, including fuel, for US and NATO forces in landlocked Afghanistan are trucked through Pakistan, much of it through the fabled pass that lies between the northwestern city of Peshawar and the border town of Torkham.

Pakistani authorities in the tribal region of Khyber blocked the main road from Peshawar through the pass to the border at Torkham late on Saturday.

Government official Bakhtiar Khan said on Sunday Pakistan had temporarily suspended oil tankers and trucks carrying sealed containers from using the pass.

Khan said security concerns had prompted it and that it would be lifted ‘as soon as possible.’

Lt. Cmdr. Walter Matthews, a spokesman for the US military in Afghanistan, would not give a direct answer about whether the western supplies’ convoys were halted, but said ‘the appropriate authorities are coordinating security procedures.’

‘The convoys will continue flowing, we will not discuss when, or where, or what,’ he said.

Denied entry to the route, dozens of the trucks and oil tankers were parked along a main road near Peshawar.

‘We have been stopped. We are not being allowed to continue our journey,’ said Rehmatullah, a driver and said his truck was carrying a military vehicle of some sort.

Asked whether security worried him, he said, ‘This is our job, and we have to do it, but, yes, we have a security risk every time we pass through the route.’
 
Well according to UNO they have ceased all aid shipments to Afghanistan and asked that the Pak Army provide military escort, no aid will be provided to Afghanistan via Khyber Pass until Army provides military escort, Army is mum at this point. Source: Dawn.net
 
Forces get ‘licence to kill’ to protect NATO supplies
* NATO supplies via Khyber to resume today
* Hundreds of trailers and containers stranded in Peshawar, Jamrud and Landikotal for last one week
* New force formed to protect coalition forces’ supplies
By Daud Khattak

PESHAWAR: The Peshawar-Torkham road will be reopened today (Monday) for moving NATO supplies to Western forces in Afghanistan, political administration officials said, adding a shoot-to-kill order had been issued for those trying to disrupt the supplies.

Hundreds of trailers and containers have been stranded on the route, which was closed last week after Taliban hijacked more than a dozen trucks carrying NATO supplies on the road through the Khyber Pass.

A senior official told Daily Times the vehicles, escorted by security officials, would pass through Khyber Agency in a convoy.

Force: Political Agent Tariq Hayat said a Quick Response Force had been formed to guard the Afghanistan-bound containers.

The trailers loaded with armoured vehicles, edibles and other logistics were seen parked along Peshawar’s Ring Road and in several areas of Jamrud and Landikotal tehsils without any security.

“It’s not the first time this has happened,” NATO spokesman James Appathurai told AP about the hold up on Sunday.

Although NATO supplies were formally suspended on Saturday, drivers said they had been denied entry into Khyber Agency since November 11 (Tuesday).

“We have been made to wait here for the last six days under no security cover,” said a driver on condition of anonymity.

Sources said the Peshawar-Jamrud road was also closed for the vehicles carrying NATO supplies on the recommendations of the NWFP government.

NWFP police chief Malik Naveed Khan told Reuters there were three criminal gangs in Khyber with direct links to terrorist groups.

The recent attacks on foreigners in Peshawar were an attempt “to defame Pakistan internationally and give an impression that there’s no rule,” Khan said.

He was confident that an offensive by security forces in Bajaur and pressure in other tribal regions had begun to pay off.

Also on Sunday, Hayat said a deadline given to the Koki Khel tribe had lapsed, adding it was now up to the tribe to expel Taliban or face action.

Meanwhile, Malik Attaullah Jan, the tribe’s leader, told a grand jirga there was no terrorist in the tribe and that the government needed a pretext to launch an offensive. He said the tribe was ready to hand over Taliban to the government provided it identified them.


Daily Times - Leading News Resource of Pakistan
 
Well according to UNO they have ceased all aid shipments to Afghanistan and asked that the Pak Army provide military escort, no aid will be provided to Afghanistan via Khyber Pass until Army provides military escort, Army is mum at this point. Source: Dawn.net

i think they have agreed to protect the convoys, but whether its the PA or FC or Police who will provide the protection is unclear.
 

17 Nov 2008

KHYBER PASS, Pakistan (AP) — Security forces escorted container trucks and oil tankers through the Khyber Pass on Monday after Pakistan reopened the route critical to transporting supplies to NATO and U.S. troops in Afghanistan.

Pakistan suspended the vehicles from the passageway for a security review last week after militants hijacked several trucks whose load included Humvees bound for the U.S.-led coalition.

On Monday, a dozen or so paramilitary pickups joined a convoy of around 30 vehicles as part of new security measures. The escort trucks bore rocket-propelled grenades and heavy machine guns. Earlier, the transport trucks travel with little or no security.

Al-Qaida and Taliban fighters, as well as ordinary criminals, are behind escalating violence along the porous Afghan-Pakistan border. The danger has made the Khyber Pass an increasingly perilous 30-mile stretch, but one that the U.S. and NATO still rely upon heavily.

It was not possible to confirm exactly what was being transported in Monday's convoy. Military supplies usually travel in sealed, unmarked containers. The route is also a critical commercial trade passage between the two countries.

Bakhtiar Khan, a No. 2 government representative in the area, said troops were authorized to shoot "at sight" any militants or otherwise armed attackers who attempt to assault the convoy.

Akhtar Gul was among the drivers who had been waiting for several days to enter the pass. He was pleased to see the armed escorts.

"Previously we had many apprehensions about the security of our lives and the trucks," said Gul, who said he did not kow what was in the sealed container he was transporting. "But we hope that now it will be safe."

U.S. and NATO officials in Afghanistan have sought to play down threats posed to the convoys coming through Pakistan, but NATO has said it is close to striking pacts with Central Asian countries that would let it transport "non-lethal" supplies from north of Afghanistan.

In April, NATO concluded a transit agreement with Russia, but it will be of practical use only once the Central Asian nations between Russia and Afghanistan come on board.

Most of the supplies headed to foreign troops in Afghanistan arrive in the southern Pakistani port city of Karachi in unmarked, sealed shipping containers and are loaded onto trucks for the journey either to the border town of Chaman or through the Khyber Pass.
 
After Georgian crisis I don't think Russian route is being actively considered. US shall never wish to use a route that makes them rely on Russia.
 
Russia has also intrests in US and NATO exbetition in Afghanistan,NATO and Russia already signed agreement for use of land route for transportation of goods only.

Can you please provide any source or proof. Russian involvement in Afghanistan is becoming evident and I don't think US or Nato are stupid enough to provide Russia more leverage by going through that route.
 
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For your review and comment pl.

Attacks on Afghan supply lines hurt NATO war effort

Attacks on Afghan supply lines hurt NATO war effort
Jon Hemming, Reuters
Published: Wednesday, November 12

NATO and Russia signed a land transit agreement in April allowing the alliance to use Russian land to deliver non-lethal supplies to troops in Afghanistan, but talks are still ongoing with Kabul's immediate neighbours Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan and Tajikistan for the goods to reach the Afghan border.

a lot has happened since april-08
 
For your review and comment pl.

Attacks on Afghan supply lines hurt NATO war effort

Attacks on Afghan supply lines hurt NATO war effort
Jon Hemming, Reuters
Published: Wednesday, November 12

NATO and Russia signed a land transit agreement in April allowing the alliance to use Russian land to deliver non-lethal supplies to troops in Afghanistan, but talks are still ongoing with Kabul's immediate neighbours Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan and Tajikistan for the goods to reach the Afghan border.

These talks were started to pressurize Pakistan and show that US or Nato has alternate routes available but after Georgian crisis this route is not been actively persued.

As far as drones are concerned they have never attacked targets of TTP. Pakistani authorities on an occassion pin pointed the location of baitullah maisud to the US and they did not react indicating they are not serious in taking him out. Perhaps he is their man.
 
Critical Khyber Pass NATO supply route reopens
* 100 troops escort two convoys g New ‘quick response force’ to protect consignments
By Daud Khattak

PESHAWAR: About 100 Frontier Corps (FC) and Khasadar (tribal police) troops escorted Afghanistan-bound container trucks and oil tankers crossing the troubled Jamrud sub-division of Khyber Agency, as supplies to NATO and US forces resumed on Monday.

Fifty-two vehicles in two convoys carried military equipment and food supplies for NATO troops and wheat for the World Food Programme (WFP) through the Khyber Pass, a critical supply route for the forces battling Taliban in Afghanistan.

The first convoy left Jamrud for Torkham at 10am followed by the second convoy at 12pm, political official Bakhtiar Khan told Daily Times. “The two convoys were safely handed over to the political authorities of Landikotal sub-division at the Prang Sam checkpost,” he added. Additional troops were stationed along the route.

Security forces will accompany two convoys of 25 vehicles each from Jamrud to Torkham every day initially, political administration officials said. The number of convoys may be increased to three depending on the security situation.

The state-run APP news agency said Khyber Agency Political Agent Tariq Hayat held meetings with security officials and set up a ‘quick response force’ to protect supplies to Afghanistan.

Hundreds of vehicles had been stranded in Peshawar and Jamrud after supplies to Afghanistan were stopped because of security concerns.

A US military spokesman in Afghanistan told the Associated Press on Monday that the suspension had not affected operations there. “We continue to move supplies through Pakistan to Afghanistan,” said Lt Cmdr Walter Matthews. “I can’t give you the route.”

Daily Times - Leading News Resource of Pakistan
 

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