Sounds good but...Militants in Pakistan's tribal region of North Waziristan have announced a month-long ceasefire.
A spokesman for the militants announced the truce in a telephone call to the BBC from an undisclosed location.
He said the truce was to encourage dialogue with the government, and demanded troops withdraw from the area.
The government has described the truce as positive. Dozens of tribal militants and government troops have been killed in clashes in the area this year.
'Pakistani Taleban'
The militants, also known as local Taleban, have set the government four main conditions.
They want a withdrawal of army troops from the region within a month, and the removal of all new check posts from North Waziristan, their spokesman Abdullah Farhad told the BBC.
He also demanded the restoration of salaries and jobs and other incentives for local tribes and the release of tribesmen arrested during military operations against al-Qaeda and Taleban fighters in the region.
The governor of North Western Frontier Province, Ali Mohammad Jan Aurakzai, said a decision on these conditions would be taken in talks with the militants.
He promised to reciprocate with a goodwill gesture but did not elaborate.
Tens of thousands of Pakistani security forces are battling Taleban and al-Qaeda supporters in the country's restive tribal belt along its border with Afghanistan.
The "Pakistani Taleban" have risen over the past year to take control of large parts of Waziristan.
A similar ceasefire was announced last year in South Waziristan, since when violence has decreased significantly.
North Waziristan is the most conservative region in the seven tribal agencies that constitute Pakistan's Federally Administered Tribal Areas (Fata) and is seen as a hotbed of Taleban activity.
BBC
That's right, he blew himself up, commiting suidice... In Self Defense. Am I the only thinking this is a sign of fucking insanity?A suicide car bomber has killed at least six soldiers in Pakistan's North Waziristan district, officials say.
At least two others were wounded when the bomber rammed his car into a checkpoint near the town of Miranshah, officials said.
The blast came a day after local militants in the area declared a month-long truce with security forces.
The BBC's Zaffar Abbas says such bombings in the Waziristan region are a major new challenge for authorities.
It is the third suicide attack in the area in the space of a month. Dozens of militants and troops have been killed in the area this year.
Tens of thousands of Pakistani security forces are trying to flush out foreign Islamic militants and their local supporters in the country's restive tribal belt along the border with Afghanistan.
Roads closed
"We can confirm at the moment that a car packed with explosives rammed a check post on the Bannu-Miranshah road," a government official told Reuters news agency.
Officials say the explosives-laden vehicle detonated about six kilometres (four miles) east of Miranshah, the main town in the North Waziristan region.
They say paramilitary soldiers at the checkpoint ordered the car to stop, and as it did so it exploded.
"The bomber's body was also blown to pieces," an official said.
Within a few minutes, helicopter gunships were in the air trying to locate other members of the group.
All roads in the area were closed off after the blast.
The casualties are the heaviest sustained by Pakistani security forces in North Waziristan since bloody clashes in Miranshah earlier this year.
Ceasefire 'holds'
The authorities have said it is unclear who is behind the attack.
Local pro-Taleban militants first denied involvement, and then told the BBC one of their members had detonated the explosives.
The militants' spokesman, Abdullah Farhad, claimed the bomber had acted in "self-defence" after security officials tried to arrest him.
He insisted the ceasefire the militants announced on Sunday still held.
Our correspondent says that the attack has inflicted a serious blow to efforts by the new governor of North West Frontier Province for a negotiated settlement of the conflict.
He says it was largely because of those efforts that local militants offered their one-month conditional ceasefire.
Officials say some of the demands - like the withdrawal of security forces from the area - were unreasonable, but some saw the offer as a positive first step towards a durable truce.