Obama says Pakistan troop deaths “regrettable”

WASHINGTON, (Reuters) – President Barack Obama yesterday called Pakistan’s president to offer condolences over a  NATO air strike that killed 24 Pakistani troops and provoked a  crisis in relations between the two countries.

Obama told President Asif Ali Zardari that the soldiers’  deaths were “regrettable” and accidental, according to a White  House statement.

The comments stopped short of a formal apology but were  aimed at soothing Pakistani fury over the Nov. 26 incident.

“Earlier today the president placed a phone call to  Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari to personally express his  condolences on the tragic loss of twenty-four Pakistani  soldiers this past week along the border of Afghanistan and  Pakistan,” the White House statement said.

“The president made clear that this regrettable incident  was not a deliberate attack on Pakistan and reiterated the  United States’ strong commitment to a full investigation.”

The NATO air strike has added to strains in relations with  Islamabad, whose cooperation Washington views as crucial to  helping to stabilize the region before foreign combat troops  leave Afghanistan in 2014.

U.S.-Pakistani relations were already frayed after the  secret U.S. raid in May that killed al Qaeda leader Osama bin  Laden.

Obama’s phone call came on the eve of an international conference in Germany on the future of Afghanistan.

Pakistan is boycotting the conference because of the NATO  air strikes.

On Saturday, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton spoke by  phone with Pakistani Prime Minister Yusuf Raza Gilani to offer  condolences.

U.S. and Pakistani officials have offered differing initial  accounts of what happened at the Pakistani posts near the  border with Afghanistan.

Pakistan said the attack was unprovoked, with officials  calling it an act of blatant aggression – an accusation the  United States has rejected.

Two U.S. officials have told Reuters that preliminary information from the ongoing investigation indicated Pakistani  officials at a border coordination center had cleared the air  strike, unaware they had troops in the area.