WASHINGTON: US officials believe the country s relationship with
Pakistan has been seriously damaged and a counterterrorism alliance can
survive only in a limited form, The New York Times reported late
Sunday.Citing unnamed US and Pakistani officials, the newspaper said
officials acknowledge this deterioration will complicate the ability to
launch attacks against Islamic extremists based in Pakistan and move
supplies into Afghanistan. US-Pakistani relations took a serious hit
last month after a series of US air strikes killed 24 Pakistani soldiers
near the border with Afghanistan. A joint US-NATO investigation
concluded that a disastrous spate of errors and botched communications
led to the deaths. Pakistan has rejected the findings. The United States
will be forced to restrict drone strikes, limit the number of its spies
and soldiers on the ground and spend more to transport supplies through
Pakistan to allied troops in Afghanistan, the report said. United
States aid to Pakistan will also be reduced sharply, the paper noted.
'We ve closed the chapter on the post-9/11 period,' The Times quoted a
senior US official as saying. 'Pakistan has told us very clearly that
they are re-evaluating the entire relationship.' American officials say
the relationship will endure in some form, but that the contours will
not be clear until Pakistan completes its wide-ranging review of the
November incident in the coming weeks, the paper pointed out.
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