Kabul Determined to Continue Confrontation, Says Former Pakistani Envoy after Istanbul Talks Collapse

Former Pakistani envoy Asif Durrani said the Istanbul talks collapsed, warning Kabul appears intent on prolonging confrontation and diplomatic deadlock with Islamabad.

Islamabad’s former envoy on Afghanistan affairs, Asif Durrani, has said the deadlock in negotiations in Istanbul suggests that the Taliban regime is determined to continue confrontation with Pakistan, and that the Pakistani team has since left the venue.

Durrani wrote on the X platform on Friday that if negotiations remain stalled, the border may remain sealed, trade suspended and travellers restricted — a scenario that risks harming ordinary citizens.

Pakistan has long accused Kabul of harbouring Tehrik‑e‑Taliban Pakistan (TTP) fighters who mount cross-border attacks; Durrani claims the Taliban delegation in Istanbul explicitly refused to address the TTP issue.

In the talks mediated by Istanbul under the aegis of Doha-brokered ceasefire mechanisms, Pakistan handed over “evidence-based” demands to Turkey and Qatar, but the Afghan side rejected signing written commitments, insisting on verbal assurances only.

The Taliban refused the allegations and stated that Afghanistan does not provide safe havens for militants, and that Islamabad must respect Afghanistan sovereignty. A Taliban spokesman claimed Pakistani forces fired into Afghanistan territory on the day talks resumed in Istanbul, but Taliban forces held back “out of respect” for the dialogue.

The breakdown of the Istanbul process underscores the absence of trust between Islamabad and Kabul, especially over verification, documentation and accountability of militant cross-border activity. Without written guarantees, Pakistan’s patience appears exhausted, and regions along the frontier may see further disruption of trade and civilian movement.

For the broader region, the failure raises the risk of renewed military flare-ups. Diplomatic channels now face a tougher task; either reconvene with a stronger framework and enforce mapping of militant routes or witness a slide back into violence that could derail the fragile cease-fire.

Kabul Determined to Continue Confrontation, Says Former Pakistani Envoy after Istanbul Talks Collapse