US withdraws NATO supply negotiators from Pakistan
US: The United States has withdrawn negotiators from
Pakistan after talks failed to reopen vital NATO supply routes into
Afghanistan, officials said Monday.
The move signaled further strain in troubled Pakistani-US
relations and followed harsh criticism last week from US Defense Secretary Leon
Panetta that saw Pakistan’s army chief refuse to meet a senior Pentagon
official.
The negotiators had been in Pakistan for about six weeks, as
US officials believed they were close to a deal with Islamabad to lift the
blockade.
Pakistan shut its border to NATO supply convoys on November
26 after a botched US air strike killed 24 Pakistani soldiers.
But no breakthrough was imminent and there was no scheduled
date for a resumption of the talks, Pentagon spokesman George Little told reporters.
“The decision was reached to bring the team home for a short
period of time,” Little said.
But Washington has not given up on discussions with
Islamabad, he said.
“That’s not to be taken as a sign of our unwillingness to
continue the dialogue with Pakistanis on this issue,” he said, adding the
negotiators are “prepared to return at any moment.” Members of the negotiating
team, which included officials and legal advisers from the State and Defense
departments, started to leave over the weekend and the remainder would soon
return to the United States, Little said.
Pakistan’s army chief, General Ashfaq Kayani, refused last
week to meet senior Pentagon official Peter Lavoy, who traveled to Pakistan to
try to resolve the dispute, officials said.
Lavoy, principal deputy assistant secretary of defense for
Asian and Pacific security affairs, “was hoping to meet with General Kayani to
work through this issue,” Little said.
The roads through Pakistan are a crucial logistical link for
NATO as it plans a withdrawal of most of the remaining 130,000-strong combat
force in Afghanistan, along with vehicles and equipment, by the end of 2014.
But Washington has refused to apologize for the November air
raid, infuriating Pakistan, and US officials have refused to pay several
thousand dollars for each truck crossing the border, as reportedly demanded by
Pakistan.
The White House said an agreement would be reached when
Pakistan is ready.
“Most of the technical agreements have been worked out but
there are still several issues outstanding. We believe that all can be resolved
and we remain ready to conclude this agreement as soon as Pakistan is ready,”
spokesman Jay Carney said. AFP
No comments