What's new

Nato supply closure costing US millions- Panetta

Imran Khan

PDF VETERAN
Joined
Oct 18, 2007
Messages
68,815
Reaction score
5
Country
Pakistan
Location
Pakistan
Nato supply closure costing US millions

Updated 51 minutes ago
From Web Edition

[Nato supply closure costing US millions ]

ShareThis1 1 0 Email0



WASHINGTON: The United States should examine setting conditions for aid to Pakistan but not cutting it off, Defense Secretary Leon Panetta said on Wednesday, as he disclosed that Islamabad's closure of supply routes to the Afghan war cost American taxpayers millions of dollars a month.



Asked during a Senate budget hearing whether he would recommend halting aid to Pakistan, Panetta said: "I'd be very careful about just shutting it down."



"What I would do is look at conditions for what we expect them to do," Panetta said, without elaborating. He agreed to help write a letter to Congress with his recommendations for how to proceed with aid for the Pakistani military and government.



The comments came less than a week after Panetta, on a trip to Kabul, said the United States was reaching the limits of its patience with Pakistan because of the safe havens the country offered to insurgents fighting in neighboring Afghanistan.



The American war effort there has become more costly, Panetta said on Wednesday, because of Pakistan's decision last November to ban trucks from carrying supplies to NATO forces in landlocked, neighboring Afghanistan.



That forced NATO to use longer, more costly routes through northern countries. Panetta told Congress that the United States was spending about $100 million a month "because of the closure of the (routes)."



It was not immediately clear how much of the $100 million was additional cost.



The Pentagon has previously estimated that it cost between two and three times more to send supplies through the so-called Northern Distribution Network, but declined to offer a dollar figure on the costs.



"It's very expensive because we're using the northern transit route in order to be able to draw-down our forces and also supply our forces," Panetta said.



Pakistan shut down the supply routes to protest a cross-border NATO air attack that killed 24 Pakistani soldiers. That strike fanned national anger over everything from covert CIA drone strikes to the U.S. incursion into Pakistan last year to kill al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden.



The United States on Monday announced it was withdrawing its team of negotiators from Pakistan without securing a deal to re-open the routes, publicly exposing a diplomatic stalemate and deeply strained relations between the uneasy allies.



One of the sticking points in the negotiations has been Pakistani demands that the United States apologize for the November strike, something the Pentagon has been unwilling to do. But Panetta acknowledged at the hearing that the apology wasn't the only issue.



"They're asking not only for that, but there are other elements to the negotiation that are also involved that have to be resolved," Panetta said. (Reuters)

Nato supply closure costing US millions - thenews.com.pk
 
.
What about supplies in the past, all that corruption by not paying exact taxes and charges and putting few dollars in corrupt generals and politicians
We should investigate the loss in revenues, nato containers not exported and their duties, penalties and damages in the country cuz by bomb and amunation imported by americans and illegaly used in pakistan where proof like raymond davis etccc
So all these years we need full and proper compensation
 
.
Close and Cut-Off relation is good for PAKISTAN... That what People of Pakistan want.... Pakistan is going in good direction we don't need any help from terrorist nation USA whoz using Afghanistan as terror camps against Pakistan. NATO Supply story is over. It's impossible now for Army and govt to re-open!
 
.
True that the Americans are loosing money but they are just bruises ( on a lighter note they would make that money selling arms to India :) ) but on the other hand can Pakistan handle the stabs if the US cuts aid.
 
.
True that the Americans are loosing money but they are just bruises ( on a lighter note they would make that money selling arms to India :) ) but on the other hand can Pakistan handle the stabs if the US cuts aid.

please sir no more BS of aid they never give us 1$ since 2 years . this tool should stopped now as aid WAS 0.05% of our GDP :frown:
 
. . .
$100 million a month is only the direct cost. The indirect cost (longer time, etc) is greater & unaccounted.

Well, if you doing a full accounting, what about the billions saved by reducing CSF disbursements? Whatever extra expense is incurred on the supplies can be easily offset by withholding monies elsewhere.
 
.
Hopefully it will double to 200 million per month, US can afford it for sure.

In response to a question on whether military assistance to Pakistan should be cut, Secretary Panetta said, “I’d be very careful about shutting down aid to Pakistan. I’d look at conditions of what we want them to do.”

Just be careful, sir
 
. .
Elements other than apology keeping GLOCs closed: Panetta

WASHINGTON: As a US Senate subcommittee heard from top American generals and members of the defense setup over the resumption of Nato supply routes and a possible US apology to Pakistan over the November check post attack, US Defence Secretary Leon Panetta said that the administration has already expressed regret over the incident, however there were other elements at play which prevented the supply route from being reopened.

“The problem is that at this point that they’re asking not just for that (apology) but other elements that have to be resolved,” Panetta told the US Senate Senate Appropriations subcommittee on the FY2013 Budget Request for the Defense Department.

When pushed by the committee that Pakistan wanted a high level apology from the civilian US administration, Panetta said that the US has already expressed regret for the Salala incident, but there were other issues, currently being negotiated with Pakistan, which would determine reopening of the Nato supply routes.

Closed routes costs US $100million a month

Asked to justify spendings and an increase listed in the defense budget, Panetta said that the closed Ground Lines of Communications (GLOCs) through Pakistan were costing the US as much as $100 million a month to maintain supplies on alternate routes.

The Secretary said that it was ‘very expensive’ to use the Northern Distribution Network (NDN) to both provide supplies to US forces there and for the logistical support for withdrawal efforts.

US apology key to reopening GLOCs

As Chairman Joint Chiefs of Staff General Dempsey and Panetta testified before the Senate subcommittee on Appropriations for Defense, Senator Dianne Feinstein said that mistakes had been made on both the US and Pakistan side when Nato helicopters attacked the Salala border check post, killing 24 soldiers as a result.

During the hearing, Senator Feinstein said that based on her discussion with ISAF Commander General John Allen, it was clear that both sides had made mistakes during the incident. She said it was her information that Pakistan, above all, wanted a civilian announcement that mistakes were made on the US side and that they would lower the cost in return for an apology.

“The national security of this country is best served if we have a positive relationship with Pakistan”, Feinstein said, adding added that with the appointment of a new ISI head and other factors, “this might be a new opportunity to do that.”:rofl:

Senator Feinstein asked why there can’t be a statement on the matter of mistakes made by the US.

Panetta countered that it’s not so simple. “That isn’t the only issue.”

In response to a question on whether military assistance to Pakistan should be cut, Secretary Panetta said, “I’d be very careful about shutting down aid to Pakistan. I’d look at conditions of what we want them to do.”

scaled.php


Pakistan should reject their apology.
 
.
There's not going to be any apology from the US. They wrongly feel an apology will humiliate them internationally.
 
. . . .
Back
Top Bottom