Pakistan's long-awaited US review likely next week

Parliament session tasked with reviewing, formally resetting relations with US could start as early as Monday.

ISLAMABAD:
A joint session of Pakistan's parliament tasked with reviewing and formally resetting troubled relations with the United States could start as early as Monday, an official said.

"I think that this particular subject will be considered by the parliament starting from the 19th of this month," foreign ministry spokesman Abdul Basit told reporters, asked when parliament will conduct the review.

The process is considered key to getting Pakistani-US diplomatic relations onto a more solid footing after US air strikes last November killed 24 Pakistani soldiers and brought the relationship to its lowest point in years.

The review is seen as a precursor to Pakistan reopening its Afghan land border to NATO convoys, which have been sealed since November 26, and a resumption of high-level American diplomatic visits.


The November 26 strikes capped a disastrous year for an alliance already seriously compromised by the covert raid to kill Osama bin Laden on May 2 and the detention of a CIA contractor who killed two Pakistanis in January 2011.

Islamabad closed its Afghan border and ordered US personnel to leave the Shamsi airbase, reportedly a hub for covert American drone strikes against the Taliban and al Qaeda in Pakistan's tribal belt.

The foreign ministry spokesman said that a decision would be taken on reopening NATO supply lines after the parliamentary process is complete.

Pakistan is expected to tax convoys carrying NATO supplies from its port in Karachi and to the border with landlocked Afghanistan. Experts believe it may be able to earn $1 million a day from the arrangement.

The Washington Post newspaper wrote recently that Pakistan and the United States were working out a more pragmatic framework, which could involve fewer US drone strikes on militants. The strikes are publicly condemned by the Islamabad government.
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