Rancor between the US and Pakistan increased after the US military raided in Abbottabad to kill Osama bin Laden.—Reuters photo

WASHINGTON: The United States and Pakistan have agreed to limit the number of American troops in that country, amid frayed relations between the two nations and a struggle to repair them, US officials told The Associated Press.

The presence of US forces inside Pakistan is highly unpopular there, and became more so following the US military raid inside Pakistan that killed Osama bin Laden.

According to US officials, the compromise pact slashes the number of US forces allowed in Pakistan to between 100 and 150, nearly half of what it has been in the past.

The number of special operations trainers would fall from 140 to fewer than 10.

Allowing any elite trainers to stay suggests a bit of a thaw in the icy relationship.  Only a few months ago Pakistan demanded that all the trainers as well as other US forces leave the country.

Officials described the agreement on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the issue. And they said there could be changes to the totals over time.

The pact reflects the volatile nature of the US-Pakistani relationship over the last several years, as Islamabad expresses its ongoing anger with American drone strikes into the country, and fury over the special operations raid that killed bin Laden in May.

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