ISLAMABAD: Pakistan confirmed late Tuesday that it had decided to reopen vital NATO supply routes into Afghanistan which have been closed since November, a government spokesman said.

"The meeting of Pakistan's defence committee of the cabinet has decided to reopen the NATO supplies," the minister of information, Qamar Zaman Kaira, told reporters in Islamabad.

Earlier in Washington, US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said that Pakistan has agreed to reopen its border to NATO supply convoys into Afghanistan after a seven-month blockade,  adding Washington was sorry for the loss of life in a botched US air raid last year.

The supply routes have been shut since November, when an American aircraft mistakenly killed 24 Pakistan soldiers, aggravating already difficult relations between Washington and Islamabad.

The announcement, following months of negotiations, will come as a relief to the United States and its NATO allies which need the routes for a planned withdrawal of combat forces from Afghanistan through 2014.

During a telephone conversation Tuesday, Pakistani Foreign Minister Hina Rabbani Khar "informed me that the ground supply lines into Afghanistan are opening," Clinton said.

Islamabad has long demanded that Washington apologize for the deadly air raid before it would reopen the NATO routes, closed in anger after the US attack.

"Foreign Minister Khar and I acknowledged the mistakes that resulted in the loss of Pakistani military lives," Clinton said in a statement.

"We are sorry for the losses suffered by the Pakistani military. We are committed to working closely with Pakistan and Afghanistan to prevent this from ever happening again."

Earlier, Pakistan's new prime minister acknowledged that keeping up the seven-month blockade would damage relations with the United States and other NATO member states.

"The continued closure of supply lines not only impinge our relationship with the US, but also on our relations with the 49 other member states of NATO," Raja Pervez Ashraf told a meeting of top civilian and military leaders.

A senior Pakistani official said the defense committee of the cabinet had met to discuss whether to end the blockade, but his office stopped short of announcing any decision after the talks ended.

The defense committee groups together the most senior cabinet ministers and military commanders. Pakistan's powerful army chief, General Ashfaq Kayani, and the head of the ISI intelligence agency, Zaheer ul Islam, were among those present.

The border blockade has forced the United States and its allies to rely on much longer, more expensive northern routes through Central Asia, Russia and the Caucasus. The cost of ferrying supplies by air and over northern railways and roads has cost the US military about $100 million a month, according to the Pentagon.

Initial hopes of a deal on re-opening the routes had fallen apart at a NATO summit in Chicago in May, amid reports that Pakistan was demanding huge fees for each of the thousands of trucks that rumble across the border every year.
But Clinton said Tuesday: "Pakistan will continue not to charge any transit fee in the larger interest of peace and security in Afghanistan and the region.

"This is a tangible demonstration of Pakistan's support for a secure, peaceful, and prosperous Afghanistan and our shared objectives in the region."

Reopening the routes will help the United States and NATO to complete its planned withdrawal of troops and equipment from Afghanistan "at a much lower cost," Clinton said.

"This is critically important to the men and women who are fighting terrorism and extremism in Afghanistan."
Almost all foreign combat troops are due to leave Afghanistan at the end of 2014, some 13 years after the US invasion of 2001 which toppled the Islamic hardline Taliban regime.