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THE STANS
US pays high price for Pakistan route cut-off: admiral
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) June 27, 2012


Moving supplies to NATO troops in Afghanistan via Central Asia costs three times as much as routes through Pakistan, which Islamabad shut seven months ago in anger, a senior US officer said Wednesday.

"On the ground, it's almost three times more expensive to come from the north as it does from Pakistan. More expensive and slower," said Vice Admiral Mark Harnitchek, director of the Defense Logistics Agency.

NATO now uses an alternative network of northern routes that pass through Russia, Central Asia and the Caucasus.

Transporting a container from the United States to Afghanistan costs about $20,000, he told a group of defense reporters.

But the cost of ferrying cargo to the Pakistani port of Karachi and then over roads to the Afghan border amounts to only a third of that price, he said.

Pakistan imposed a blockade on NATO supply convoys after 24 of its soldiers were killed by mistake in a US air strike in November along the Afghan border.

US Defense Secretary Leon Panetta said earlier this month that the Pakistan border closure costs the United States an additional $100 million a month.

Before the route cut-off, about 30-40 percent of the fuel used by coalition forces came through Pakistan.

Fuel is now transported over land via the northern routes, while food is flown in on cargo aircraft, he said.

"It was challenging initially and we took a bit of a dip there in terms of days of supply. But now our stocks of food and fuel have never been higher," Harnitchek said.

The supply routes will be on the agenda when the commander of NATO-led forces in Afghanistan, General John Allen, meets his counterparts in Pakistan on Wednesday, officials said.

US officials raised expectations in May that a deal was imminent with Pakistan on the reopening of the routes, but no announcement came and Washington withdrew its team of negotiators.

The United States has refused to issue a formal apology over the air strikes, despite appeals from Pakistan.

Amid continued deadlock, the Pentagon on Wednesday expressed hope that a deal eventually could be reached on the supply routes.

"I think there is reason for optimism. I think we're reaching a point in our relationship with Pakistan that suggests that things are settling down a bit," spokesman George Little told reporters at a Pentagon briefing.

"I think the basis for some kind of agreement on the GLOCs (ground lines of communication) is there and is real and we hope that we reach a resolution," he said.

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Canada watchdog clears military police in Afghan probe
Montreal (AFP) June 27, 2012 - A Canadian watchdog on Wednesday cleared military police involved in transfers of Taliban detainees in Afghanistan, saying they could not have known the prisoners would be subject to torture.

The Military Police Complaints Commission however slammed the Canadian government and military brass for not sharing information on the risk of prisoner abuse with the officers.

"While the commission has dismissed the complaint against eight individual senior military police officers, we have made a number of recommendations that we believe will improve the quality of policing services delivered by the military police," said commission chair Glenn Stannard in delivering a 535-page report.

The commission heard from 40 witnesses and reviewed thousands of documents during a four-year probe that was triggered by a complaint made by Amnesty International and the British Columbia Civil Liberties Association.

The two rights groups accused eight officers of failing to investigate senior military commanders in Afghanistan for directing the transfers of detainees in the face of a "known risk of torture," from May 2007 to June 2008.

The commission found that the complaints were "unsubstantiated."

Its report noted that the military police was "marginalized" by senior military commanders in Afghanistan when it came to discussions and information related to post-transfer issues.

The report also said information on detainee abuse, including reports on Afghan prison visits by Canadian foreign ministry officials, "stayed within a small group of people in Afghanistan that excluded the military police."

According to government figures, the Canadian military transferred 283 captives to Afghan authorities from 2001 to 2008.

Canadian and international laws ban the transfer of war prisoners if there is a risk they may be tortured by their captors.

A political crisis was averted last year after the government backed down from its initial refusal to release top secret documents detailing Afghan prisoner transfers.

The files were believed to contain evidence that Canada transferred prisoners to Afghan custody knowing they could be tortured, but in the end were held up as proof of no wrongdoing by Canadian soldiers.



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THE STANS
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Dushanbe (AFP) June 26, 2012
Extending credits worth almost $2 billion, mighty China is spreading its influence to its poor ex-Soviet neighbour Tajikistan in the hope of winning mineral riches and a loyal strategic ally. Tajikistan is the poorest nation to have emerged from the USSR's collapse, with a Gross National Income per capita of $780 per year and around 40 percent of GDP coming from remittances from migrants wor ... read more


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