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Pakistan blocks NATO supplies

Exactly. The blockade is a purely anti-war stance.

There are lots of people in NATO countries also who want the troops home. Pakistani public is showing solidarity with the people of NATO and saying, "NATO, go home to your families; they want you back".

And alot of troops also want to go back.

Some steps taken by the US are too much, and be in no way we termed as co-operation.

The public is demanding now.
 
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well what i know that the cartoon should be not the horse to be Pakistan the horse should be USA/ NATO

and the guy should be Pakistan

but to make more meaning i guess my point would have been Pakistan (the guy ) running away while the NATO / USA (horse) running after him telling him to come back
 
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Rocket attack on NATO terminal near Kharotabad, BALUCHISTAN. Atleast 20 oil tankers destroyed.
 
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Pakistan truckers back NATO supply route blockade

CHAMAN, Pakistan—Sleeping in a freezing cab, running out of money and worried about militant attacks, Ghulab is one of thousands of truck drivers stranded as a result of Pakistan's blockade of the Afghan border to NATO and U.S. war supplies.

But they and the businessmen who run what has been a lucrative trade for most of the last decade say they support the decision to shut the frontier in retaliation for coalition airstrikes almost two weeks ago that killed 24 Pakistani troops in two remote border outposts.

"We risk our lives and take these supplies to Afghanistan for NATO, and in return they are killing our soldiers," said Jan, whose fuel truck is parked in a terminal in the dusty, dangerous border town of Chaman in southwestern Baluchistan.

"This is unacceptable, and we unanimously support the government over closing the border."

Given the current anti-U.S. sentiment in Pakistan, drivers might not want to call publicly for the border to reopen. There is broad anger throughout the country over the attack, and the U.S. faces a challenge in repairing a relationship critical to its hopes of ending the Afghan war.

"I hope Allah grants my prayer that this NATO supply ends permanently," said Ghaza Gul, a 45-year-old driver who has been in the trucking profession since was he was 10 years old, when he washed the vehicles and made tea. "I would rather die of hunger than carry these shipments," he said, sitting on a dirty mat with other drivers at a terminal in Karachi, the port city where the supplies are unloaded.

Despite such declarations, the drivers have remained with their vehicles. That suggests the trucking companies believe the stoppage will be temporary. The trucks are currently parked at terminals close to the border, some in large towns in the area.

Pakistan closed its two Afghan crossings in Chaman and Torkham, in the northwest Khyber tribal area, almost immediately after NATO aircraft attacked two army posts along the border on Nov. 26. The supply lines account for 40 percent of the fuel, clothes, vehicles and other "non-lethal" supplies for the Afghan war.

President Barack Obama and other American officials have expressed their condolences for the deaths and promised a full investigation into what they have said was an accident. But this has done little to assuage anger in Pakistan, where the military has continued to describe the attack as a deliberate act of aggression.

The government, needing to show a firm response to placate critics who have long protested its alliance with Washington, has also retaliated by demanding that the U.S. vacate an air base used for CIA drones and by boycotting an international conference aimed at stabilizing Afghanistan.

Many analysts believe Pakistan and the U.S. want to avoid a total rupture of their difficult relationship because of its mutual strategic importance. Pakistan needs American aid and cannot afford diplomatic isolation; Washington wants Islamabad's help with Afghanistan.

For that reason, most people think the trucks will start rolling again soon, likely within a few weeks.

"It won't be much longer," said Imtiaz Gul, director of the Center for Research and Security Studies in Islamabad. "They can't sustain it indefinitely. It would alienate the whole world," he said, referring to the many countries that have troops in the coalition.

NATO officials have said the coalition has built a stockpile of military and other supplies that could keep operations in Afghanistan running at their current level for several months even if the route through Pakistan remains closed.

The coalition has reduced its dependence on Pakistan over time by developing alternative routes that enter Afghanistan through Central Asia. NATO could seek to expand those routes, but that would make the coalition heavily dependent on Russia at a time when ties with Moscow are increasingly strained.

Last year, Pakistan kept the Torkham crossing closed for 11 days after U.S. helicopters accidentally killed two Pakistani troops. It reopened the route along the fabled Khyber Pass after Washington formally apologized.

Militants and criminals, some reportedly working with trucking companies engaging in insurance scams, took advantage of the situation to carry out near-daily attacks against trucks stacked up in poorly guarded terminals and roadside rest stops. The attacks killed several people and destroyed about 150 vehicles.

Authorities have taken stronger steps to protect the trucks this time around.

Many of the vehicles were ordered to drive south away from the militant-infested border areas in the northwest, said truck owners and drivers. Those that remained were prohibited to park along the road, where they were most vulnerable, and were instead put in terminals that may not be 100 percent safe but at least have some security.

There has been only one attack since Pakistan closed the border on Nov. 26.

Assailants fired rockets at a terminal for fuel tankers close to Quetta, the capital of Baluchistan province, on Thursday, torching at least 23 trucks but causing no casualties. No group has claimed responsibility for the attack.

That attack rattled Jan and other truckers in Chaman, about 75 miles (120 kilometers) from where the rockets hit.

"Last night I could not sleep as I feared that there might be a Quetta-like attack here in Chaman as well," said Jan.

Asif Mehmood, chairman of the Pakistan Transport Federation, was the only person involved in the trade to call on the government to allow NATO to resume shipments. He said the attack was an accident and shouldn't have been met with such retaliation.

"This is a weak government that comes under pressure from the army and acts without reason," said Mehmood.

But others said the government was right to punish NATO.

"Transport is our business and certainly business is important to us, but our nation is more important to us than anything else," said Shakir Khan, president of the Khyber Goods Transport Association. "At this testing time, we steadfastly stand with our nation and our army."


Pakistan truckers back NATO supply route blockade - Boston.com
 
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Pakistan’s NATO blockade enters third week

PESHAWAR - Pakistan's blockade of the vital US supply line into Afghanistan entered a third week Saturday, the longest closure of the 10-year war with no imminent sign of the border reopening.

Pakistan's fragile alliance with the United States crashed to new lows two weeks ago on November 26 when NATO air strikes killed 24 Pakistani soldiers in what the Pakistan military called a deliberate attack.

US President Barack Obama telephoned President Asif Ali Zardari to offer his condolences, but Washington has stopped short of apologising pending the results of a military investigation into what happened, due December 23.

Although Pakistani and US officials dispute the precise sequence of events, Pakistan closed its two crossings to US and NATO supplies and gave American personnel until Sunday to leave an air base reportedly used by CIA drones.

Officials in the northwest, where the main Torkham crossing into Afghanistan is situated, told AFP there were no plans to reopen.
"There is strong public resentment. People are angry about this incident and we cannot take a decision in haste," one senior security official told AFP.

"Pakistan will reopen the border when public anger cools down and the route is protected," he added.
Two nights ago, gunmen destroyed at least 34 trucks in a gun and rocket attack on a NATO trucking terminal in the southwestern province of Baluchistan.

Around 44 oil tankers and goods trucks were parked at the temporary terminal, one of three set up in and around Quetta for stranded vehicles.

No group claimed responsibility for the attack, but the Taliban have carried out similar strikes to disrupt supplies in the past.
The 140,000 foreign troops in landlocked Afghanistan rely on fuel, food and equipment brought in from outside -- nearly half of which routes through Pakistan, the quickest and the cheapest supply line.

Publicly, the coalition has insisted its fight against the Taliban will not be affected. British newspaper The Guardian says stockpiles mean there would be no impact on NATO operations for several months.

Pakistani-US relations, which have yet to recover from a secret American raid that killed Osama bin Laden on May 2, are considered at their lowest ebb.

The partnership is often described as an unhappy marriage of convenience in which Pakistan depends on billions of dollars of US aid and the United States depends on Pakistani logistical support for the war effort in Afghanistan.

"People are still protesting. How can we take this decision in such an atmosphere?" said a security official in the northwest.

On Thursday, around 800 people poured onto the streets in the Pakistani capital Islamabad, venting fury with the United States and NATO, demanding an end to the unpopular alliance in the war against the Taliban.
"NATO will have to apologise. They will have to provide solid security for the future," the official added.


Pakistan's NATO blockade enters third week | Pakistan Today | Latest news, Breaking news, Pakistan News, World news, business, sport and multimedia
 
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In theory Pentagon plans for 90 days + of war provisions. That means Pakistan will have to stay firm till March 2012 to see if it really hurts the US. So everybody hunker down, grab a beer, lassi, tea, or naswar and sit tight.....it is going to be a long winter of discontent for everybody.
 
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Pakistan Truckers Back NATO Supply Route Blockade
CHAMAN, Pakistan (AP) — Sleeping in a freezing cab, running out of money and worried about militant attacks, Ghulab Jan is one of thousands of truck drivers stranded as a result of Pakistan's blockade of the Afghan border to NATO and U.S. war supplies.

But they and the businessmen who run what has been a lucrative trade for most of the last decade say they support the decision to shut the frontier in retaliation for coalition airstrikes almost two weeks ago that killed 24 Pakistani troops in two remote border outposts.:pakistan:

"We risk our lives and take these supplies to Afghanistan for NATO, and in return they are killing our soldiers," said Jan, whose fuel truck is parked in a terminal in the dusty, dangerous border town of Chaman in southwestern Baluchistan.

"This is unacceptable, and we unanimously support the government over closing the border."

Given the current anti-U.S. sentiment in Pakistan, drivers might not want to call publicly for the border to reopen. There is broad anger throughout the country over the attack, and the U.S. faces a challenge in repairing a relationship critical to its hopes of ending the Afghan war.

"I hope Allah grants my prayer that this NATO supply ends permanently," said Ghaza Gul, a 45-year-old driver who has been in the trucking profession since was he was 10 years old, when he washed the vehicles and made tea. "I would rather die of hunger than carry these shipments," he said, sitting on a dirty mat with other drivers at a terminal in Karachi, the port city where the supplies are unloaded.

Despite such declarations, the drivers have remained with their vehicles. That suggests the trucking companies believe the stoppage will be temporary. The trucks are currently parked at terminals close to the border, some in large towns in the area.

Pakistan closed its two Afghan crossings in Chaman and Torkham, in the northwest Khyber tribal area, almost immediately after NATO aircraft attacked two army posts along the border on Nov. 26. The supply lines account for 40 percent of the fuel, clothes, vehicles and other "non-lethal" supplies for the Afghan war.

President Barack Obama and other American officials have expressed their condolences for the deaths and promised a full investigation into what they have said was an accident. But this has done little to assuage anger in Pakistan, where the military has continued to describe the attack as a deliberate act of aggression.

The government, needing to show a firm response to placate critics who have long protested its alliance with Washington, has also retaliated by demanding that the U.S. vacate an air base used for CIA drones and by boycotting an international conference aimed at stabilizing Afghanistan.

Many analysts believe Pakistan and the U.S. want to avoid a total rupture of their difficult relationship because of its mutual strategic importance. Pakistan needs American aid and cannot afford diplomatic isolation; Washington wants Islamabad's help with Afghanistan.

For that reason, most people think the trucks will start rolling again soon, likely within a few weeks.

"It won't be much longer," said Imtiaz Gul, director of the Center for Research and Security Studies in Islamabad. "They can't sustain it indefinitely. It would alienate the whole world," he said, referring to the many countries that have troops in the coalition.

NATO officials have said the coalition has built a stockpile of military and other supplies that could keep operations in Afghanistan running at their current level for several months even if the route through Pakistan remains closed.

The coalition has reduced its dependence on Pakistan over time by developing alternative routes that enter Afghanistan through Central Asia. NATO could seek to expand those routes, but that would make the coalition heavily dependent on Russia at a time when ties with Moscow are increasingly strained.

Last year, Pakistan kept the Torkham crossing closed for 11 days after U.S. helicopters accidentally killed two Pakistani troops. It reopened the route along the fabled Khyber Pass after Washington formally apologized.

Militants and criminals, some reportedly working with trucking companies engaging in insurance scams, took advantage of the situation to carry out near-daily attacks against trucks stacked up in poorly guarded terminals and roadside rest stops. The attacks killed several people and destroyed about 150 vehicles.

Authorities have taken stronger steps to protect the trucks this time around.

Many of the vehicles were ordered to drive south away from the militant-infested border areas in the northwest, said truck owners and drivers. Those that remained were prohibited to park along the road, where they were most vulnerable, and were instead put in terminals that may not be 100 percent safe but at least have some security.
There has been only one attack since Pakistan closed the border on Nov. 26.

Assailants fired rockets at a terminal for fuel tankers close to Quetta, the capital of Baluchistan province, on Thursday, torching at least 23 trucks but causing no casualties. No group has claimed responsibility for the attack.

That attack rattled Jan and other truckers in Chaman, about 75 miles (120 kilometers) from where the rockets hit.

"Last night I could not sleep as I feared that there might be a Quetta-like attack here in Chaman as well," said Jan.

Asif Mehmood, chairman of the Pakistan Transport Federation, was the only person involved in the trade to call on the government to allow NATO to resume shipments. He said the attack was an accident and shouldn't have been met with such retaliation.

"This is a weak government that comes under pressure from the army and acts without reason," said Mehmood.

But others said the government was right to punish NATO.

"Transport is our business and certainly business is important to us, but our nation is more important to us than anything else," said Shakir Khan, president of the Khyber Goods Transport Association. "At this testing time, we steadfastly stand with our nation and our army."
 
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Stranded NATO supplies clogging Pakistan's sea ports
Press Trust of India, Updated: December 11, 2011 19:27 IST


Karachi: Pakistani authorities are facing a major problem of clogging at two sea ports. The Karachi port and the Bin Qasim terminal, also at Karachi, are being occupied by the stranded supplies after the government said it would not allow transit to NATO supplies following the Mohmand air strikes that killed 24 Pakistani soldiers.

According to a Dawn newspaper report since the embargo was imposed after the November 26 attack in Mohmand agency, four container ships and two vehicle carriers have unloaded around 2,000 boxes and 1200 military vehicles at the two sea ports. The report claims they have been stranded at the ports for over two weeks.

"Since November 26th two vehicle carriers unloaded 400 and 800 military vehicles belonging to the US army," the report said.

It said before the embargo was imposed, already over 600 containers and oil tankers were to go to Afghanistan via Torkham and Chaman. These containers and tankers too are now stranded at the border as the government has not allowed them to cross the border.

"They are there for 16-days now in the chilly and cold weather," a port source said.

Sources said that security forces have also held back scores of Afghan transit trade containers on the way to Afghanistan on the suspicion of carrying NATO goods at Takhta Beg checkpost in Jamrud, Afghanistan.

The report said that if the large number of NATO containers and tankers were not removed soon from the two ports, there will hardly be any space left for the movement of commercial cargo and this would badly affect the country's imports and exports.

"There is a daily flow of containers coming with goods booked by merchants from the China market," one source said.

The report said that since ports are meant to be transit points and not for storage, the government would have to immediately decide on the removal of the containers from ports that have clogged up traffic and trade.

Three days back unidentified gunmen set on fire 42 NATO containers and oil tankers in Quetta in the Balochistan province.


Why dont some unidentified people steal or burn these american assets???
 
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Why dont some unidentified people steal or burn these american assets???
So that pakistani govt can blame non state actors and wash it's hands off.
BTW would you like pakistani goods being damaged by non-state-actors in other countries?
 
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The way things are going , 6 months of blockade is all its gonna take to bring America to its knees in afghanistan
 
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I think now there is a very clear realisation wihtin the armed forces that by allowing the yanks a free pass for men and material over our territory we were setting the stage for the yanks to attack us with the very supplies that went over our territory!!
 
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how the f can you belief that? dats coming from PTI..INDIA...the words there..this news is BS and full of lies...Pls some other source
 
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The army will do its part for the country, the people must do theirs. No army on earth can stand up to American military might in a direct fight. Let's keep a sense of reality.

Lets keep more sense of reality: army now installing air defense system on western border and some other measures to hit back in any aggression so question here where they heck were the minds of our army till 26th of November? How many times we listened this bla bla from air chief and COAS that we will protect sovereignty of our country and will defend every inch of our land and what a hit they got back on army faces that a helicopter came and killed 25 soldiers and get their rout back without any problem. now what credibility left in their words?

Don’t you think that this mighty US army has no damn problem even now when Pakistan upgrades its defense system on border?

People! huh.. people were ever in favour of Pakistan and ever played significant and unforgettable role in defense issues so they did and doing what they can in worst living conditions & now question what the hell did our army receiving large amount of funds and living in far better luxurious living conditions? After 32 years they came to understand that there should be proper defense system on our western border….genius.

People like us very happy that supply routs are blocked but who knows how many transport planes fly through provided air corridors every day and what they carry?

Don’t you realize why they so quickly blocked supply? Last time where I remembered they took some time for that.

Fun dude, just a fun. Be happy with BLOCKADE of NATO supply.
 
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crash and burn



ASIA

11 December 2011 Last updated at 15:48 GMT
Pakistan blockage of Nato convoys 'may last weeks'
Pakistan may continue its blocking of Nato convoys into Afghanistan for several weeks, Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani has told the BBC.
Pakistan stopped the convoys in protest at US air strikes which killed 24 of its troops at two checkpoints on the Afghan border last month.
Mr Gilani refused to rule out closing Pakistan's airspace to the US.
He also denied rumours President Asif Ali Zardari had suffered a stroke and the army was trying to oust him.
Mr Gilani said Mr Zardari was making a rapid improvement in hospital in Dubai, but would need two weeks' rest before returning home.
Credibility gap
The air strikes on 26 November marked a low point in relations between Washington and Islamabad, which have long been strained by the US-led military campaign against militants in Afghanistan.
In a wide-ranging interview with the BBC, Mr Gilani said Pakistan and the US needed to trust each other better.
"Yes there is a credibility gap, we are working together and still we don't trust each other," Mr Gilani said.
"I think we have to improve our relationship so that... we should have more confidence in each other."
Nato forces in Afghanistan rely significantly on overland supply routes from the Pakistani sea port of Karachi, which enter Afghanistan through the Khyber Pass.
Hundreds of lorries have been camped out next to border crossings, waiting for the crisis to blow over.
Asked about the state of health of Mr Zardari, Mr Gilani denied that the president had written a letter of resignation, as claimed by a source in Dubai.
"Why should he write?" asked Mr Gilani. "He has the backing and support of the entire parliament."
Dismissing speculation about a quiet coup, he said: "Rumours are rumours."
The Pakistani prime minister also denied a Pakistani Taliban claim that it was engaged in peace talks with his government.
But he added: "Whosoever surrenders and denounces violence, they are acceptable to us."
Base vacated
Nato has apologised for the air strikes, calling them a "tragic unintended incident".
In the aftermath, Pakistan also demanded the US leave the Shamsi air base in Balochistan.
Pakistani officials have confirmed that US forces have now vacated the base, meeting a deadline.
US officials could not be reached immediately for comment about the report.
Shamsi was widely believed to have been used in covert CIA drone attacks against Taliban and al-Qaeda targets in north-west Pakistan's tribal areas bordering Afghanistan, but correspondents say it had not been used to launch drones for some time.
Vacating Shamsi is not expected to significantly curtail drone attacks in Pakistan, according to an Associated Press news agency report.
Mr Gilani also said he would investigate the blocking of the BBC's international news TV channel, BBC World News, by Pakistani cable television operators. Operators say the move is in response to a documentary broadcast by the channel entitled Secret Pakistan.
A BBC spokesperson said: "We welcome the prime minister's support of free speech and promise to investigate this ban. We call on the government to carry out an investigation rapidly and for BBC services to be restored in Pakistan.
 
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