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US transported on 40 containers through Pakistan to Afghanistan in 8 months

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Pakistan supply routes open, but move gear slowly into Afghanistan
Sunday, March 10, 2013

WASHINGTON: It is the least expensive way to get food and fuel to US troops in Afghanistan. But eight months after Pakistan reopened its ground supply routes for the NATO war effort, hardly any new cargo has taken that path into the landlocked country.

Instead, supplies have been moving almost entirely along far more expensive routes, one of several factors that have prompted senior Pentagon officials to warn that Afghan war costs are higher than projected at a time of increasingly tight budgets.

In what was hailed as diplomatic breakthrough, the United States and Pakistan agreed to reopen the supply lines last July after Washington issued a reluctant apology for an air attack that killed 24 Pakistani soldiers along the Afghan border in November 2011.

But restoring the Pakistani supply routes to full service after a seven-month closure has taken time. The United States has cleared upward of 5,000 of the 7,000 pieces of backlogged cargo in the supply routes.

But data from the US Military’s Transportation Command show that only 40 containers of new cargo have moved across Pakistani ground routes since July. At the same time, about 28,000 20-foot containers came through alternate pathways, known as the Northern Distribution Network, into Afghanistan from July 2012 through last month.

General William Fraser, head of Transcom, said the situation was improving. After months of working to clear a backlog of supplies and deal with procedural issues, cargo movement on the Pakistani supply lines has improved and officials are ready to use them more heavily, he said.

“It’s all moving in the right direction,” Fraser told Reuters. “Now we’ve just got to up the rate.”

Reopening the routes was considered vital to the US war effort. Beyond being cheaper, they are seen as the best way to remove military equipment from Afghanistan as the 11-year-old conflict draws to a close.

Last year, then-Defense Secretary Leon Panetta estimated the closure of Pakistan’s supply routes cost US taxpayers about $100 million more a month for the use of alternatives - either by air or through the NDN, a series of complicated pathways across Europe, Russia, and Central Asia.

That cost has come down as the size of the US force in Afghanistan has fallen to about 66,000 today from 94,000 when Pakistan closed the routes. But it still costs about $61 million more a month to use the NDN and other alternatives rather than Pakistan, Pentagon spokesman Mark Wright said.


Fraser said there were several reasons for the slow start-up. They included the need to work through a backlog of cargo; reach agreement on how to re-export equipment that was no longer needed; obtain new rates from contractors; and decide on the process for bringing military cargo out of Afghanistan.

He said that fewer than 2,000 pieces of cargo remained in the backlog left over from the closure. Some of that cargo belonged to military units no longer in Afghanistan, so it will be re-exported, which required developing new procedures.

Fraser said the Pakistani bureaucracy also had to work out its own procedures for issuing permits at the border to allow equipment to be imported into the country for the purposes of taking it to Karachi to be loaded on ships. “Those are all in place now,” Fraser said. “It just took time to work through that.”

After reaching a memorandum of understanding on reopening the supply lines, the two sides negotiated terms for handling new shipments both to and from Afghanistan. Previously, cargo only moved into Afghanistan.

The Pentagon said it expected to start regular shipments bringing equipment out of Afghanistan along Pakistan’s ground routes this month at about 100 pieces of cargo a week. That figure would gradually increase over the course of the spring and summer.

Fraser said his discussions with Pakistani officials last month were aimed at getting traffic on the supply lines back to the levels they were at before the closure last year - about 30 percent of all cargo.

“That ... would mean 50 to 60 pieces crossing daily,” he said. “That’s our goal right now and they understand that. They’re in agreement, so let’s work first to get back to those pre-closure levels of crossings.”

Navy Commander Bill Speaks, another Pentagon spokesman, said the US military planned to use the Pakistani ground routes for roughly 50 percent to 60 percent of the cargo removed from Afghanistan as part of the US drawdown.

Ramping up the use of the Pakistan supply lines could help ease financial pressure on the military services, which have been hit with a number of financial constraints, including a $46 billion automatic spending cut that went into force on March 1. reuters

Daily Times - Leading News Resource of Pakistan

Salaam to all the Muslims,

:pakistan:

I think Pakistani military's reaction in November 2011 say Amreeka ko apni naani aur daadi bi yaad ah gi ho gi.

Salaam to all the Muslims.
 
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they probably wanted to show that even after dialogue on GLOC and apology for their trigger-happy moronics @ Salala that even then they have other options and that they wont jump into placing all eggs in one basket

whether its an issue of pride or other reasons at play, who knows?

the Obamas initial "surge" is no longer there.... "scale-down" has long been in the cards so naturally Pakistan --> Afghanistan movements would slow down

question is -- how much reliance they would put on Pakistan GLOC...the cheapest and most direct route but one that gives us leverage

interesting times up ahead
 
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they probably wanted to show that even after dialogue on GLOC and apology for their trigger-happy moronics @ Salala that even then they have other options and that they wont jump into placing all eggs in one basket

whether its an issue of pride or other reasons at play, who knows?

the Obamas initial "surge" is no longer there.... "scale-down" has long been in the cards so naturally Pakistan --> Afghanistan movements would slow down

question is -- how much reliance they would put on Pakistan GLOC...the cheapest and most direct route but one that gives us leverage

interesting times up ahead

Salaam to all the Muslims,

:pakistan:

Pakistan does not want any leverage over the United States or anything else from the United States. Pakistan just wants the Americans to get out of Afghanistan - their times up.

Pakistan's trade with the United States in 2010-2011 was $5.8 billion and during the last fiscal year 2011-2012 Pakistan has reduced it to $5.2 billion. Pakistan is systematically reducing it's interactions, trades, links and everything else with the United States. It's all about China, China now in Pakistan.

Recently, China also announced that they will help decrease American influence in Pakistan.
http://www.defence.pk/forums/strate...et-pakistan-out-americas-influence-china.html

Salaam to all the Muslims.
 
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Salaam to all the Muslims,

:pakistan:

Pakistan does not want any leverage over the United States or anything else from the United States. Pakistan just wants the Americans to get out of Afghanistan - their times up.

Pakistan's trade with the United States in 2010-2011 was $5.8 billion and during the last fiscal year 2011-2012 Pakistan has reduced it to $5.2 billion. Pakistan is systematically reducing it's interactions, trades, links and everything else with the United States. It's all about China, China now in Pakistan.

Recently, China also announced that they will help decrease American influence in Pakistan.
http://www.defence.pk/forums/strate...et-pakistan-out-americas-influence-china.html

Salaam to all the Muslims.

Waleykum Salam

I appreciate the post and you sharing numbers to back your claims but I personally don't think its advisable for Pakistan to "move away" from trade with the United States. Even now they are one of our primary trade partners.

I guess some of our decreased trade is attributed to decreasing competitiveness of Pakistani goods (thanks to corruption, floods, mismanagement and load-shedding at home) but at the same time the US has helped Pakistan in the economic sphere (for example, investing in cold storage of Mangos in Multan so that they can meet export requirements and tap into USA market)....large all-American retailers like Wal Mart purchase many goods from Pakistan -- everything from salts to linens.

we need to adopt a balanced approach towards diplomacy and not resort to extremes....whatever is in our economic and strategic interests we must exercise those options

regional trade and cooperation however will be most beneficial to Pakistan in the long-run
 
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Waleykum Salam

I appreciate the post and you sharing numbers to back your claims but I personally don't think its advisable for Pakistan to "move away" from trade with the United States. Even now they are one of our primary trade partners.

I guess some of our decreased trade is attributed to decreasing competitiveness of Pakistani goods (thanks to corruption, floods, mismanagement and load-shedding at home) but at the same time the US has helped Pakistan in the economic sphere (for example, investing in cold storage of Mangos in Multan so that they can meet export requirements and tap into USA market)....large all-American retailers like Wal Mart purchase many goods from Pakistan -- everything from salts to linens.

we need to adopt a balanced approach towards diplomacy and not resort to extremes....whatever is in our economic and strategic interests we must exercise those options

regional trade and cooperation however will be most beneficial to Pakistan in the long-run

Salaam to all the Muslims,

:pakistan:

Pakistan-China Trade 2013: $12 Billion
Pakistan-China bilateral trade crosses $12 billion mark

Pakistan-UAE Trade 2012: $8.4 Billion
Economic relations: UAE invites Pakistani investment – The Express Tribune

Pakistan-US Trade: 2012: $5.2 Billion
Pakistan | Office of the United States Trade Representative

Please also note that Pakistan's total trade for the financial year 2011-2012 crossed more than $65 Billion.

Do you know the figures for Pakistan-GCC trade and Pakistan-EU trade?

Allahu Alam

Salaam to all the Muslims.
 
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Salaam to all the Muslims,

:pakistan:

Pakistan-China Trade 2013: $12 Billion
Pakistan-China bilateral trade crosses $12 billion mark

Pakistan-UAE Trade 2012: $8.4 Billion
Economic relations: UAE invites Pakistani investment – The Express Tribune

Pakistan-US Trade: 2012: $5.2 Billion
Pakistan | Office of the United States Trade Representative

Please also note that Pakistan's total trade for the financial year 2011-2012 crossed more than $65 Billion.

Do you know the figures for Pakistan-GCC trade and Pakistan-EU trade?

Allahu Alam

Salaam to all the Muslims.

Pakistan can not just simply walk away from US due economic and strategic leavers US has against Pakistan e.g IMF W.B, Afghan withdrawal.

Moreover its not sane to do so at least for now,diplomacy should always be aimed at making friends and its better for Pakistan to have good relations with both China and US than to just rely on China,

your thoughts may be influenced by emotions and hopes of grand alliances that used to be in cold war those sadly,will not happen US-China rivalry is far more complex than US-Soviet one.
 
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Time to charge the U.S. more perhaps recover some damage due to the future sanctions. Just enough so that Pakistani route is still cheaper compared to the alternatives.
 
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should always be aimed at making friends and its better for Pakistan to have good relations with both China and US than to just rely on China,Moreover its not sane to do so at least for now,diplomacy
Yes....well said...and I blame Pakistan's old foreign policy.....we are also relying on USA too much...We need to form strong bonds with our neighbour and regional countries as well....we need to get out of this blackhole of loneliness which we have created due to our false foreign policy...
What our relationship with USA has given us except money,blood and war??and USA tries to show her dominency so much that she even wants to command us for not to sign gas pipeline project...

Time to charge the U.S. more perhaps recover some damage due to the future sanctions. Just enough so that Pakistani route is still cheaper compared to the alternatives.

@WebMaster bhai, USA is happily paying us and buying our interests for her own benifit..almost every month we hear a news of sentor John Kerry who arrives in Pakistan and when our media spokesmen ask him about his "Deal" then he proudly says "my hands are filled with money"
 
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Time to charge the U.S. more perhaps recover some damage due to the future sanctions. Just enough so that Pakistani route is still cheaper compared to the alternatives.

We have tried to do it before, after the Salala massacre, and failed then. How can we succeed in doing that now?
 
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