World | NATO US to Expand Routes Into Afghanistan Safer roads will depend on cooperation of Central Asian nations By Katherine Thompson Posted Dec 31, 2008 9:40 AM CST Copied Trucks carrying materials for US and NATO troops drive on a highway in Surobi, east of Kabul, Afghanistan on Wednesday, Dec. 17, 2008. (AP Photo/Musadeq Sadeq) More than four-fifths of the supplies for allied troops in Afghanistan travel via Pakistan along a treacherous route, prompting the US to plan new supply lines in the embattled region. The fragility of the current setup was laid bare after a Pakistani counter-militant offensive shut down the Khyber Pass yesterday, the New York Times reports. But cartography alone won't cut it: Alternative routes would depend heavily on the cooperation of Russia and authoritarian countries like Uzbekistan and Tajikistan. The US- and NATO-led supply lines won't include weapons, and officials have promised that the routes would not require new American bases. "These countries of Central Asia recognize that this is their struggle, too," an official says. Read These Next Kristi Noem won't like this Wall Street Journal exposé. Au pair struck a deal to walk free in murder case. She got 10 years. Jimmy Fallon's pasta sauces are now kaput thanks to Epstein files. Jeanine Pirro is suing her own hometown after she fell in the street. Report an error