Pakistan–NATO relations

A 3000 strong contingent consisting of two Battalion Groups and a National Support (NS) Headquarters left for Bosnia and Croatia in May 1994.

In 2007 state visit to NATO headquarters in Brussels, Belgium, Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz put it: "Pakistan is committed to a strong, stable Afghanistan.

"[1] Although Pakistan has expressed reservations with some operational issues, dialogue on Afghanistan once occupied important role with the Alliance.

In late 2013, the PTI-led government in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province blocked the Torkham supply line to protest drone attacks in Pakistan.

[11] Since 2008, the NATO supply routes have also been under attack by insurgent groups,[12] and in an incident the same year, ~42 oil tankers were destroyed, and later that same year 300 militants attacked a facility in Peshawar run by Port World Logistics and set fire to 96 supply trucks and six containers.

NATO supply routes through Pakistan
Chief of Army Staff Ashfaq Pervez Kayani and Commander of NATO International Security Assistance Force (Afghanistan) Stanley A. McChrystal lead participants towards a tripartite military conference in Kabul