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APSUKKUR, Pakistan – Floods that have inundated sections of Pakistan and cut off roads and railways have also disrupted the main supply lines for U.S. and NATO military forces in Afghanistan.
Trucks carrying U.S. military vehicles were caught in a 30-mile traffic jam on the main highway from the southern port of Karachi to the capital, Islamabad, over the weekend after floodwaters had broken the road and reduced traffic to single file.
Those trucks were far from their usual routes to Afghanistan through western Pakistan, roads that have been cut off because of the floods. Trucks are now having to take a much longer way through the center of the country to Islamabad, and then on to Peshawar. But roads to that city have also been cut off. Capt. Kevin Aandahl, a spokesman for U.S. Transportation Command, which oversees logistics for the war, said the flooding had slowed supply lines but had not stopped materiel from getting to U.S. troops in Afghanistan.
Meanwhile, the United Nations said Tuesday that about 800,000 people have been cut off by floods in Pakistan and are reachable only by air, and that 40 more helicopters were needed to ferry lifesaving aid.
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