Sunday, 17 Nov 2024

Iran holds talks with Afghan Taleban amid peace push

TEHERAN (AFP) – Iran has met with the Afghan Taleban, a top Iranian security official said on Wednesday (Dec 26) according to the Tasnim news agency, just days after the militants attended reconciliation talks in the United Arab Emirates.

Ali Shamkhani, secretary of Iran’s Supreme National Security Council, made the announcement while on a visit to the Afghan capital Kabul, several Iranian agencies reported.

“The Afghan government has been informed of the communications and talks carried out with the Taleban, and this process will continue,” he said, quoted by Tasnim.

No details on where the talks took place were given by the news agency, which is considered close to Iran’s Revolutionary Guards.

“The Islamic Republic has always been one of the primary pillars of stability in the region and cooperation between the two countries will certainly help in fixing Afghanistan’s security issues of today,” Shamkhani said.

Abas Aslani, a reporter for Tasnim, tweeted that it was the first time talks had been confirmed between Iran and the Taleban.

The announcement follows reconciliation talks last week between the United States and Taleban officials in the United Arab Emirates.

The Taleban said they also held meetings with officials from the UAE, Pakistan and Saudi Arabia, but the militants refused to meet a delegation from Afghanistan.

The renewed diplomatic efforts come as Washington seeks a way out of the 17-year conflict.

An American official told Agence France-Presse last week that US President Donald Trump had decided to pull out “roughly half” of the 14,000 US forces, but the White House has yet to confirm the widely publicised move.

COMPLEX HISTORY

Iran and Afghanistan share a nearly 1,000 kilometre border and have a had a complex relationship in recent years.

Teheran has long supported the Shia Hazara minority in Afghanistan, who were violently persecuted by the Taleban during its rule in the 1990s.

Iran worked alongside the United States and Western powers to help drive out the Taleban after the US-led invasion in 2001.

But there have been allegations, from Western and Afghan sources, that Iran’s Revolutionary Guards have in recent years established ties with the Taleban aimed at driving out US forces from Afghanistan.

Iran hosted Pakistani Foreign Minister Shah Mehmood Qureshi on Monday (Dec 24) in Teheran. No details were given of the discussions.

Teheran welcomed Trump’s announcement that he was withdrawing all US forces from Syria last week, but has not commented on the reduction in Afghanistan.

“The presence of American forces was from the very start, in principle, a wrong and illogical move and a primary cause of instability and insecurity in the region,” foreign ministry spokesman Bahram Ghasemi said on Saturday (Dec 22).

Hawks in Washington have criticised Trump’s move, saying it will cede significant influence in the region to Iran.

The Taleban, meanwhile, has made significant territorial gains this year as its fighters inflict record casualties on government forces.

Afghanistan’s largest militant group carried out an hours-long gun and bomb attack on a Kabul government compound on Monday that killed at least 43 people, one of the deadliest assaults on the capital this year.

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