ISLAMABAD: Pakistanâs information minister Attaullah Tarar said on Wednesday that talks with the Afghan Taliban failed to yield a âworkable solutionâ despite multiple meetings in TĂŒrkiye, accusing Kabul of evading commitments to curb militants and thriving on a âwar economyâ that risks dragging Afghans into another conflict.
Pakistan and Afghanistan had been holding peace talks in Istanbul since Saturday after the two countries saw the worst fighting in decades, leaving dozens dead and several wounded earlier this month. Clashes erupted after Pakistan conducted airstrikes near Kabul as it went after Pakistani Taliban militants, which Islamabad says operate from sanctuaries in Afghanistan. The Taliban responded with attacks on Pakistani military posts along the length of the 2,600-km (1,600-mile) contested border.
The two sides had agreed to a ceasefire in Doha on Oct. 19, mediated by TĂŒrkiye and Qatar, and met again in Istanbul on Oct. 25 to discuss a lasting truce. Pakistan sought assurances that Afghan territory would not be used by militants, particularly the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP), to carry out cross-border attacks, while Kabul demanded that Islamabad respect its sovereignty and refrain from strikes inside its borders.
âOver the last four days of dialogue, the Afghan Taliban delegation repeatedly agreed to Pakistan's logical and legitimate demand for credible and decisive action against these organisations and terrorists,â Tarar said in a post on X, formerly Twitter. âSufficient and irrefutable evidence was provided by Pakistan which was acknowledged by Afghan Taliban and the hosts.â
âHowever, regrettably, the Afghan side gave no assurances,â he added. âThe Afghan side kept deviating from the core issue, evading the key point upon which the dialogue process was initiated. Instead of accepting any responsibility, the Afghan Taliban resorted to blame game, deflection and ruses. The dialogue thus failed to bring about any workable solution.â
Tarar said Pakistan has repeatedly engaged the Afghan Taliban since their return to power in August 2021, urging them to prevent militant groups from using Afghan soil to attack neighboring countries.
Those efforts, he noted, âproved futile due to Afghan Taliban Regimeâs unabated support to anti-Pakistan terrorists.â
âSince the Taliban regime bears no responsibility towards the people of Afghanistan and thrives on war economy, it desires to drag and mire Afghan people into a needless war,â he said, adding that Pakistan had âheld countless rounds of talksâ in pursuit of peace, but Kabul remained indifferent to its losses.
The Pakistani minister thanked TĂŒrkiye and Qatar for facilitating the talks, saying Pakistanâs foremost priority remains the security of its people.
âWe will continue to take all possible measures necessary to protect our people from the menace of terrorism,â he said, pledging to âdecimate the terrorists, their sanctuaries, their abetters and supporters.â
BREAKDOWN OF TALKS
Pakistani officials said a day earlier the country was making a âlast-ditch effortâ to convince the Afghan Taliban to take decisive action against militants targeting its civilians and security forces. Explaining the breakdown, one of them attributed the outcome to âinternal fractures and backstage power-play inside the Afghan regime.â
âFrom the very first session it became clear that the Afghan delegation was not negotiating with one voice,â the official said, requesting anonymity. âThree competing blocs â Kandahar, Kabul and Khost â were all feeding separate instructions to the delegates.â
When the talks reached the stage of written guarantees on TTP safe havens, he continued, the Kandahar faction signaled quiet willingness to proceed, but during the break, the Kabul group âstaged a manufactured complication.â
âThey suddenly insisted that no agreement can be signed unless the United States joins as a formal guarantor,â he said. âThis was not part of the agenda, nor had it been raised in previous rounds.â
The official said the demand also caught mediators by surprise and appeared aimed not at security assurances but at âreopening a financial corridor through Washington.â
âInstead of countering TTP, they are trying to monetize TTPâs existence to revive a flow of dollars,â he added. âUntil Kabul resolves its internal power struggle and stops trying to convert terrorism into political currency, no progress is possible.â
Pakistan and Afghanistan share a long, porous border that has long been a flashpoint, with both sides accusing each other of harboring militants and violating sovereignty. Relations have sharply deteriorated since the Talibanâs return to power in 2021, with Pakistan reporting a surge in cross-border attacks attributed to the TTP.
While the two sides engaged in talks in Istanbul, tensions remained high along the frontier, with weekend clashes leaving five Pakistani soldiers and 25 militants dead, according to Pakistanâs military.
On Saturday, Defence Minister Khawaja Asif warned that failure to reach an agreement would mean âopen war.â