The strained ties between Pakistan and the United States eased yesterday as the Islamabad Government agreed to reopen a critical Nato supply line to Afghanistan.
The move came after Washington apologised for killing 24 of Pakistan's soldiers in an airstrike last November near the Afghan border.
The deal was finalised in a phone call from Hillary Clinton to her Pakistani opposite number, Hina Rabbani Khar, in which the Secretary of State expressed her regret at the incident.
"We are sorry for the losses suffered by the Pakistani military," Clinton said in a statement on the conversation in which, she added, the two acknowledged "mistakes" that resulted in the loss of life.
Pakistan closed the supply line in retaliation for the botched airstrike, forcing the US to use a longer route running through Central Asia, costing an extra US$100 million a month. The first trucks were expected to use the reopened route today, but Pentagon officials said it would be days before shipments returned to former levels.