U.S. Supply Line From Pakistan Reopens
Trucks, Now Well-Guarded, Traverse Khyber Pass To Afghanistan After Hijacking Last Week
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Pakistani oil tanker carrying supplies for U.S. and NATO forces, wait for security clearance to travel to Afghanistan at Pakistani border post in Chaman, Nov. 17, 2008. (AP Photo/Shah Khalid)
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Injured Pakistani journalist Sami Yousafzai in a local hospital in Peshawar, Pakistan on Friday, Nov 14, 2008. Yousafzai, accompanied with Japanese journalist Motoki Yotsukura, unseen, was wounded in an apparent kidnapped attempt while traveling to Peshawar. (AP Photo)
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Injured Japanese journalist Motoki Yotsukura arrives at a local hospital in Islamabad, Pakistan on Friday, Nov 14, 2008. (AP Photo/B.K.Bangash)
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People look at a destroyed video shop following a blast in Dera Ismail Khan, Pakistan, Nov. 14, 2008. (AP Photo/Naveed Sultan)
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A U.S. soldier investigates next to a damaged vehicle used in a suicide attack and the body of a bomber in Batti Kot district of Nangarhar province, Afghanistan, Nov. 13, 2008. (AP Photo/Rahmat Gul)
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Pakistan suspended the vehicles from the passageway for a security review last week after militants hijacked several trucks whose load included Humvees bound for the U.S.-led coalition.
On Monday, a dozen or so paramilitary pickups joined a convoy of around 30 vehicles as part of new security measures. The escort trucks bore rocket-propelled grenades and heavy machine guns. Earlier, the transport trucks traveled with little or no security.
Al Qaeda and Taliban fighters, as well as ordinary criminals, are behind escalating violence along the porous Afghan-Pakistan border. The danger has made the Khyber Pass an increasingly perilous 30-mile stretch, but one that the U.S. and NATO still rely upon heavily.
The violence in the region continued Monday when an Afghan official said a suicide bomber blew himself up at the entrance of a government office in Kandahar province, killing two policemen and a civilian.
Across the border in Pakistan, a suicide car bomber attacked an army post in the northwest on Monday, killing at least three people, while violence elsewhere in the region left at least five suspected militants dead.
Pakistan is engaged in a pair of major offensives against militants who use pockets of the northwest to stage attacks on American and NATO forces in Afghanistan. Insurgents have retaliated over the offensives by staging a wave of attacks throughout Pakistan.
The suicide attack Monday happened in Gashkor, a village in the Swat Valley, said police official Ali Rehman. Swat, a former tourist destination, is the scene of one of the two offensives.
The other offensive is focused on Bajur, a tribal region bordering Afghanistan that is a rumored hiding place of al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden.
Security forces used artillery fire to kill at least five suspected insurgents in parts of Bajur overnight, said Jamil Khan, a No. 2 government representative in the area. The military claims to have killed 1,600 insurgents in Bajur since August.
Previously we had many apprehensions about the security of our lives and the trucks. But we hope that now it will be safe.
Akhtar Gul, Truck driverA U.S. military spokesman in Afghanistan insisted Monday the suspension had not affected operations there. "We continue to move supplies through Pakistan to Afghanistan," said Lt. Cmdr. Walter Matthews. "I can't give you the route."
Bakhtiar Khan, a No. 2 government representative in the area, said troops were authorized to shoot "at sight" any militants or otherwise armed attackers who attempt to assault the convoy.
Akhtar Gul was among the drivers who had been waiting for several days to enter the pass. He was pleased to see the armed escorts.
"Previously we had many apprehensions about the security of our lives and the trucks," said Gul, who said he did not know what was in the sealed container he was transporting. "But we hope that now it will be safe."
U.S. and NATO officials in Afghanistan have sought to play down threats posed to the convoys coming through Pakistan, but NATO has said it is close to striking pacts with Central Asian countries that would let it transport "non-lethal" supplies from north of Afghanistan.
In April, NATO concluded a transit agreement with Russia, but it will be of practical use only once the Central Asian nations between Russia and Afghanistan come on board.
Most of the supplies headed to foreign troops in Afghanistan arrive in the southern Pakistani port city of Karachi in unmarked, sealed shipping containers and are loaded onto trucks for the journey either to the border town of Chaman or through the Khyber Pass.
© MMVIII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
- petro 49 is just spreading fear propaganda, sounds very familiar ,Washington does it all the time.How else can they take what the constitution and bill of rights give the people?They say "Terrorists want to take your rights" but the only rights taken , have been taken by the government preaching fear.The War on Terror is a flat lie, and has cost the people of this country lives , liberty, and rights, not to mention setting the stage for the economy disaster we face.
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- Hey guadalcanal3, I present efficiently, not conventionally.
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- The Pakistani Army protects Al Qada from the Coalition. Their nuclear missiles will devastate American Forces, if necessary. Al Qada is free to traffick narcotics and smut without threat of attack. They are a force to be dealt with for many years to come.
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- Petro49L...for a person who doesn''t even know how to spell Al Qaeda properly...you sure seem to know a lot.
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- Al Qada freely uses the Pakistani highways to transport illicit narcotics. The crime syndicate trafficks methamphetamine, PCP, LSD, tar heroin, china white heroin, and potent hashish to desperate Junkies. Bin Laden made millions of dollars dealing the drugs. He invests the profits into any U.S. corporation over the Internet. Brokerages easily accept Al Qada business. Osama transfers funds to domestic terrorist groups in America. They purchase computers, hand guns, trucks, and explosives for subversive activities. Who can stop an Organization with that kind of money?
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Best-selling author Mitch Albom on his first nonfiction work since "Tuesdays with Morrie."




