At Pakistan’s Afghan border, a trade shutdown empties markets

By Haq Nawaz Khan and 

The Washington Post
January 25, 2026

PESHAWAR, Pakistan — In the sprawling fruit market in this northwestern Pakistani city, Imran has spent the past several months waiting for shipments that aren’t arriving.

The crates of Afghan walnuts, apricots and pomegranates he once hauled through the stalls have disappeared, casualties of Pakistan’s decision to close its border with neighboring Afghanistan.

Pakistan shut all major crossings along its roughly 1,600-mile border with Afghanistan in mid-October amid clashes with the Taliban-run government in Kabul. The sides eventually agreed to a ceasefire, but crossings remain closed to trade. It amounts to the longest border shutdown in living memory, locals say.

“It’s not enough to feed my family,” said Imran, who does not have a surname. He keeps coming to the empty market every day because he can’t bear the thought of staying home and explaining to his children why he’s not at work.

For decades, markets like this one in northwestern Pakistan, little more than an hour’s drive from the Afghan border, have served as a barometer of relations between the two countries. Previous border shutdowns typically lasted only days or weeks before they were resolved by local elders.

But the current standoff has turned one of Asia’s most sensitive borders into a source of mounting economic pain and political frustration for communities on both sides, while Islamabad and Kabul publicly downplay the costs.

Pakistani officials say the primary reason they closed the border — the Afghan government’s alleged support for a militant group in Pakistan — remains unaddressed by the Afghans. The Pakistanis accuse the Afghan Taliban of harboring the Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan, a group that has intensified attacks in northwestern Pakistan since the United States withdrew from Afghanistan in 2021.

Pakistan’s military chief has claimed that around two thirds of the attackers are Afghan. “Isn’t Afghanistan shedding the blood of our Pakistani children?” Chief of Defense Forces Asim Munir asked during a conference last month, the Pakistan’s state broadcaster reported.

The TTP has pledged allegiance to Afghan Taliban leader Haibatullah Akhundzada, but operates independently of Kabul. The Afghan Taliban have repeatedly denied harboring members of the group.

The Pakistani and Afghan governments both insist they can absorb the economic impact. Zabihullah Mujahid, the Taliban’s chief spokesman, said the borders would reopen only if Pakistan provided “strong assurances that this unlawful blockade will not happen again for political purposes.”

Pakistani military spokesman Lt. Gen. Ahmad Sharif Chaudhry says the closures have caused “no losses” to Pakistan but have instead curbed “smuggling and terrorism.”

Here in Peshawar, those claims ring hollow. When crossings were open, Afghan produce flowed east into Pakistan in steady convoys of trucks, feeding wholesale markets and sustaining thousands of laborers. An estimated 700 to 900 trucks passed daily through the Torkham crossing alone.

The prices of some fruits and vegetables in Pakistan have risen by as much as 400 percent since the border was closed, traders say, as supplies from Afghanistan have dwindled. Before the shutdown, Pakistan was Afghanistan’s largest trading partner, accounting for over half of Afghan exports in 2023, much of it fresh fruit and agricultural produce, and about one-fifth of its imports.

The disruption has rippled beyond agriculture. Pakistani exports of cement and pharmaceuticals to Afghanistan and fruits to other parts of Central Asia have also been hit, compounding losses for industries that rely heavily on overland trade routes.

Pakistan, with deep-sea ports in the south and access to global supply chains, is far less dependent on Afghan trade, but the economic strain in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province is fueling long-standing grievances about Islamabad’s alleged neglect of the region. Many Pakistani traders here now echo the Taliban’s rhetoric.

“Trade and politics should be separated,” said Mujeeb ur Rehman, president of the association of customs clearing agents at the Torkham border.

For much of the 20th century, residents of the border region crossed freely between the two countries. During the 1980s, Pakistani officials encouraged the flow, shepherding weapons and fighters to support the Afghan mujahideen against the Soviet invasion and occupation.

When militant violence later spilled back into Pakistan, Islamabad built a fence along most of the frontier, dividing communities and deepening resentment.

At Torkham, Rehman, the customs agents’ representative, estimated that the current closure has left up to 3,000 local workers and more than 1,000 customs agents unemployed. The revenue collected from transit fees was shared with surrounding communities. “Pakistan was making billions of rupees from its exports,” he said.

The consequences in Afghanistan could be more severe. Fruits and vegetables are among the country’s main exports, and when the border was closed in October, many shipments were left to rot. Routing goods through Iran or Central Asia is far costlier and slower, said Haji Farooq, a fruit trader in Kabul. He estimated that up to 80 percent of Afghan produce has been caught in limbo.

Though the border is closed to trade, Pakistan has continued to deport Afghans. More than 1.6 million Afghans have been pressured to leave Pakistan since 2023 in one of the largest deportation drives in decades.

The large share of Afghanistan’s medicines that was previously supplied by Pakistan is now also caught in the trade impasse. Taliban officials say they are seeking alternative sources, including India, which has moved to capitalize on the tensions. New Delhi, Islamabad’s archrival, launched airfreight corridors with Afghanistan in December to ship pharmaceuticals and other essential goods.

A permanent shift would be costly for Pakistan, said Junaid Altaf, a representative of Pakistan’s trade industry: “Millions of dollars were invested.”

“But ultimately, this is about politics and ego,” said Muhammad Ishaq, another Pakistani trade representative. While Pakistan may have less to lose than Afghanistan, he said, a lasting rupture in trade “could still be a serious blow.”

Noack reported from Bangkok.

At Pakistan’s Afghan border, a trade shutdown empties markets
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UN Deputy Chief Meets in Kabul to Discuss Humanitarian Aid and Doha Process

United Nations Under-Secretary-General Rosemary DiCarlo visited Kabul to advance UN-led talks on humanitarian aid, counter-narcotics, and the Doha process framework.

Rosemary DiCarlo, the United Nations Under-Secretary-General for Political and Peacebuilding Affairs, arrived in Kabul on Saturday to advance key UN-led consultations.

The visit focused on the ongoing humanitarian, economic, and political challenges facing Afghanistan, as UN officials continue to coordinate assistance and maintain international dialogue.

During meetings with Taliban Interior Minister Sirajuddin Haqqani on Sunday, discussions included engagement with the international community, counter-narcotics cooperation, economic stability, private sector restrictions, and effectiveness of humanitarian aid programs. Haqqani claimed efforts against drug production and trafficking have produced positive results, a frequent assertion made by Taliban officials since 2022.

Afghanistan remains heavily dependent on humanitarian assistance amid economic isolation, banking restrictions, and widespread poverty, with UN agencies warning of prolonged vulnerability for millions.

The UN-led Doha process was launched to establish structured political dialogue on Afghanistan, bringing together the Taliban, regional states, and international stakeholders under UN facilitation.

DiCarlo reaffirmed the United Nations’ commitment to continued humanitarian assistance and emphasized the importance of sustained engagement. Working groups established under the third phase of the Doha talks are expected to hold their next meetings in Kabul.

DiCarlo also met Taliban Foreign Minister Amir Khan Muttaqi to discuss the Doha dialogue framework and future consultations, underscoring the UN’s role in facilitating dialogue.

The meetings highlight ongoing UN efforts to maintain dialogue and coordination in Afghanistan, addressing humanitarian needs while navigating complex political and economic challenges.

UN Deputy Chief Meets in Kabul to Discuss Humanitarian Aid and Doha Process
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Uzbek Power Supply Drop Leaves Kabul With Hours of Daily Outages

Citizens are calling on authorities to urgently resolve the issue.

A technical issue with the 220-kilovolt electricity line imported from Uzbekistan has led to power shortages in Kabul, causing serious problems for residents.

Citizens are calling on authorities to urgently resolve the issue.

Abdul Rahman, a Kabul resident, said: “We’re facing many problems due to power cuts. We’re students living in rented rooms, and we only get electricity for 4 to 5 hours in 24 hours.”

Another resident, Ajmal, said: “We get power for only 3 or 4 hours a day, and even then, it comes and goes every 10 minutes.”

Meanwhile, the spokesperson for Da Afghanistan Breshna Sherkat (DABS), the national power company, says efforts are underway to resolve the issue and meet public needs.

He added that thermal electricity from Tarakhil Power Plant has also been activated to help address the shortage.

DABS spokesperson Mohammad Sadiq Haqparast said: “In response, we are supplying thermal power from the Tarakhil Power Plant. Though it is very costly, consuming between 160,000 to 200,000 liters of fuel every 10 hours.”

Economic analyst Mohammad Nabi Afghan said: “The only long-term solution to our power problems is to become self-sufficient. We have many natural resources and should utilize them.”

This situation comes as recent snowfall has not only blocked key roads in some provinces but also disrupted power transmission lines.

Due to this weather, the 220-kilovolt transmission line from Uzbekistan has faced technical issues between Pul-e-Khumri and Kabul, leading to reduced electricity supply in Kabul and 12 other provinces.

Uzbek Power Supply Drop Leaves Kabul With Hours of Daily Outages
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UNICEF, UNESCO warn of deep learning crisis in Afghanistan

Khaama Press

 

UN agencies UNICEF and UNESCO warned on World Education Day that Afghanistan faces a severe learning crisis affecting millions of children nationwide.

UNICEF and UNESCO said in a joint statement on Saturday, January 24, that 93% of children in Afghanistan cannot read adequately by the end of primary school.

The agencies also said 2.2 million adolescent girls remain out of school, deepening gender gaps and long-term risks for the country’s education system.

Preliminary findings from a 2025 study show students perform significantly better in schools where most teachers hold university degrees, particularly in language learning.

Soohyun Kim, UNESCO’s representative in Afghanistan, said denying girls access to education carries heavy social and economic costs for families and society.

Afghanistan’s education system has been under strain due to prolonged conflict, poverty, and limited resources, challenges that have intensified in recent years.

International organizations have repeatedly warned that restrictions on girls’ education risk creating a lost generation and weakening future economic development.

UNESCO and UNICEF said they remain committed to supporting a comprehensive approach to rebuilding education in Afghanistan despite ongoing restrictions and challenges.

UNICEF, UNESCO warn of deep learning crisis in Afghanistan
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UN Deputy Chief and Muttaqi Hold Talks on the Doha Process in Kabul

Khaama Press

Rosemary DiCarlo, the United Nations Under-Secretary-General for Political and Peacebuilding Affairs, held talks in Kabul on Saturday with Amir Khan Muttaqi on the Doha process.

Rosemary DiCarlo, the United Nations Under-Secretary-General for Political and Peacebuilding Affairs, met Taliban Foreign Minister Amir Khan Muttaqi on Saturday during her official visit to Kabul.

According to a Taliban Foreign Ministry statement, the meeting included extensive discussions on engagement, coordination mechanisms, and upcoming meetings linked to the UN-led Doha process on Afghanistan.

These talks come as the Doha process remains the main international framework for engagement with Afghanistan, while continuing to face criticism over its limited inclusivity and political scope.

At the same time, Afghanistan is grappling with a deep economic crisis and severe financial restrictions, which Taliban officials repeatedly describe as major obstacles to improving living conditions nationwide.

During the meeting, Amir Khan Muttaqi urged the United Nations to help lift banking sanctions on Afghanistan and to facilitate the release of frozen assets belonging to the country’s central bank.

For her part, Rosemary DiCarlo emphasized continued cooperation through the Doha process working groups, describing sustained dialogue as beneficial for all stakeholders involved in Afghanistan’s future.

The United Nations has already established technical working groups on counter-narcotics and economic coordination under the Doha framework, and has signaled plans to convene a fourth Doha meeting.

However, UN efforts to promote meaningful and inclusive dialogue involving Taliban authorities, regional actors, women, civil society, and political opponents continue to face serious challenges.

UN Deputy Chief and Muttaqi Hold Talks on the Doha Process in Kabul
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UN Women: Girls’ Education a Fundamental Right, Not a Privilege

By Fidel Rahmati

Khaama Press

 

UN Women stresses that education is a fundamental right for every girl and woman, urging immediate global action to ensure access and opportunity.

UN Women has emphasized that education is not a privilege but a fundamental right for all women and girls, ensuring equal access and opportunities. Every girl is entitled to choose and participate in learning without discrimination or restriction.

The organization tweeted on Saturday, January 24, that denying girls education undermines not only individual rights but also broader societal development, peace, and prosperity in affected regions.

The United Nations and international human rights frameworks consistently uphold that education is a basic right. Agencies stress that access to learning is critical for gender equality, social stability, and economic progress.

In Afghanistan, however, the situation remains dire. Since the Taliban regained control, millions of girls have been barred from schools and universities, limiting their futures and the country’s long-term development.

UN agencies, including UNESCO and UNICEF, highlight that the lack of access to education for adolescent girls contributes to a nationwide learning crisis, impacting literacy, vocational skills, and health outcomes.

UN Women calls on the international community to intervene, provide financial and technical support, and ensure safe, inclusive, and consistent access to education for Afghan girls and women.

The agency insists that guaranteeing education for girls is essential not only for personal growth but also for strengthening communities, promoting human rights, and securing Afghanistan’s future stability.

Global cooperation and immediate policy measures are crucial to safeguard Afghan girls’ education, protect their rights, and uphold the principle that learning is a fundamental human entitlement.

UN Women: Girls’ Education a Fundamental Right, Not a Privilege
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UN Deputy Chief and Muttaqi Hold Talks on the Doha Process in Kabul

Khaama Press

Rosemary DiCarlo, the United Nations Under-Secretary-General for Political and Peacebuilding Affairs, held talks in Kabul on Saturday with Amir Khan Muttaqi on the Doha process.

Rosemary DiCarlo, the United Nations Under-Secretary-General for Political and Peacebuilding Affairs, met Taliban Foreign Minister Amir Khan Muttaqi on Saturday during her official visit to Kabul.

According to a Taliban Foreign Ministry statement, the meeting included extensive discussions on engagement, coordination mechanisms, and upcoming meetings linked to the UN-led Doha process on Afghanistan.

These talks come as the Doha process remains the main international framework for engagement with Afghanistan, while continuing to face criticism over its limited inclusivity and political scope.

At the same time, Afghanistan is grappling with a deep economic crisis and severe financial restrictions, which Taliban officials repeatedly describe as major obstacles to improving living conditions nationwide.

During the meeting, Amir Khan Muttaqi urged the United Nations to help lift banking sanctions on Afghanistan and to facilitate the release of frozen assets belonging to the country’s central bank.

For her part, Rosemary DiCarlo emphasized continued cooperation through the Doha process working groups, describing sustained dialogue as beneficial for all stakeholders involved in Afghanistan’s future.

The United Nations has already established technical working groups on counter-narcotics and economic coordination under the Doha framework, and has signaled plans to convene a fourth Doha meeting.

However, UN efforts to promote meaningful and inclusive dialogue involving Taliban authorities, regional actors, women, civil society, and political opponents continue to face serious challenges.

UN Deputy Chief and Muttaqi Hold Talks on the Doha Process in Kabul
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Heavy snow and rainfall kill 61, injure 110 over 3 days in Afghanistan, authorities say

By ABDUL QAHAR AFGHAN

KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) — Heavy snow and rainfall over the past three days have killed more than 60 people and injured over 100 across Afghanistan, the country’s disaster management authority said Saturday, as authorities in the impoverished country struggled to open roads and gain access to cut-off villages.

National Disaster Management Authority spokesman Yousaf Hammad said 61 people had died and 110 were injured, while 458 homes had been completely or partially destroyed and hundreds of animals had died in 15 of Afghanistan’s 34 provinces. The numbers, he said, could change as authorities gathered more information from the provinces.

Afghanistan is highly vulnerable to extreme weather events, with snow and heavy rain that triggers flash floods often killing dozens, or even hundreds, of people at a time. In 2024, more than 300 people died in springtime flash floods.

Decades of conflict coupled with poor infrastructure, a struggling economy, deforestation and the intensifying effects of climate change have amplified the impact of such disasters, particularly in remote areas where many homes are built of mud and offer limited protection against sudden deluges or heavy snowfall.

The country’s eastern provinces are also still struggling to recover from devastating earthquakes that struck last year, in late August and again in November, destroying villages and killing more than 2,200 people.

Those displaced by the quakes are particularly vulnerable to the extreme cold and bad weather conditions. In December, UNICEF said an estimated 270,000 children in the areas affected by the quakes were at “severe risk of life-threatening diseases related to the cold.”

Earlier this month, the United Nations said Afghanistan would “remain one of the world’s largest humanitarian crises in 2026.” The U.N. and its humanitarian partners launched a $1.7 billion appeal to assist nearly 18 million people in urgent need in the country.

 

Heavy snow and rainfall kill 61, injure 110 over 3 days in Afghanistan, authorities say
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An Unlikely Source of Crypto Innovation: Afghanistan

The repressive Taliban government is suspicious of the internet. But a start-up in the country is building blockchain-based tools to transform humanitarian aid.

At a bustling money changer in northwestern Syria, a 46-year-old farmer gripped a plastic card like a lifeline. She had never heard of cryptocurrency, but the card held $500 of it to help restart her farm after nearly 14 years of civil war.

As a teller confirmed the total and cashed out the account, the farmer, Hala Mahmoud Almahmoud, smiled with relief and paused to give thanks. Where had such technology come from, she asked.

The answer surprised her: Afghanistan.

Blockchain-based cash transfers are not the kind of innovation that many people would expect from a country better known for its repressive Taliban leadership, which views the internet with suspicion. But in a nation that has largely turned its back on the world, an Afghan start-up is building tools that it hopes will transform how humanitarian aid is delivered in countries shattered by conflict.

“We’ve lived through these challenges ourselves, so we know how to develop an approach that works,” said Zakia Hussaini, 26, a programmer at the start-up, HesabPay, which designed the technology driving Ms. Almahmoud’s card.

An early proponent of the platform was the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees. The agency uses it to support more than 86,000 families in Afghanistan in one of the biggest public blockchain aid initiatives in the world. Mercy Corps, which donated the funds to Ms. Almahmoud, worked with HesabPay to expand its reach to include Syria, and programs for Sudan and Haiti are in development.

In Syria, getting money from abroad can be complicated. Cash is scarce, international banks steer clear of the country and remittance firms like Western Union can charge as much as 10 percent in transfer fees. HesabPay allows organizations like Mercy Corps to sidestep those roadblocks.

Sanzar Kakar, the Afghan American entrepreneur behind HesabPay, used to run Afghanistan’s leading payroll processor. But the U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan in 2021 and the Taliban’s return set off a financial collapse. Sanctions put a halt to international transfers, and the central bank unraveled.

To address the country’s increasing financial insecurity, Mr. Kakar turned to blockchain. He built HesabPay, named after the local word for “account,” as a phone-based app that enabled instant transfers from one digital wallet to another, bypassing banks and the Taliban government. The Afghan government has since granted his business a license to operate officially as a financial institution, he said.

Today, the platform has more than 650,000 wallets in Afghanistan, of which about 50,000 are in regular use, moving approximately $60 million a month in stablecoins backed by the afghani, Afghanistan’s currency.

Since February 2025, the U.N. has used HesabPay to deliver nearly $25 million via 80,000 digital wallets to vulnerable Afghans returning home, said Carmen Hett, the corporate treasurer of the U.N. refugee agency. “This helps reduce transaction fees, waiting periods and enhance traceability, real-time monitoring and accountability of transactions,” she said.

It is not surprising that organizations like Mercy Corps and the United Nations are turning to blockchain-based money transfers to deliver aid, said Ric Shreves, an expert in decentralized finance solutions and the president of the Decentralized Cooperation Foundation. For such organizations, he said, “it’s almost all upsides, compared to the way aid has traditionally been delivered.”

But there are still risks, he said, especially when the payment systems are based on local-currency stablecoins, as they are in Afghanistan. (In Syria, the cryptocurrency in HesabPay wallets is backed by the U.S. dollar, a more stable option.) Just as wallets can be shut down for interacting with sanctioned individuals, they can also theoretically be shut down by a country’s central bank for political reasons.

“When we provide people with a nonphysical means of doing transactions, that also means there’s a possibility that those transactions could be blocked through technological means,” Mr. Shreves said. Digital currencies are demonstrably safer than cash, he added, but they still cannot be stashed under a mattress.

In recent years, aid groups have increasingly turned to cash as a fast and dignified form of assistance. But cash has a flaw: It is hard to track. Donors want proof that their money reaches the right hands. Since President Trump slashed U.S. foreign assistance early last year, groups like Mercy Corps have come under even more pressure to demonstrate their impact and integrity.

That is where blockchain comes in, creating a digital trail that records exactly how much was sent, to whom, and where it was spent. That mix of speed and accountability could be “a way to win back trust from those who have come to doubt the usefulness of aid,” said Scott Onder, Mercy Corps’s chief investment officer.

HesabPay comes with additional safeguards, like a real-time dashboard that tracks wallet activity and cross-checks it against international compliance databases. The company says the system is designed to detect illicit activity like terrorist financing, money laundering and online scams, and to raise an alert the moment suspicious transactions appear. For aid donors, it offers a level of oversight rarely possible in fragile states.

During a recent online demonstration, Nigel Pont, the company’s senior adviser for humanitarian affairs, clicked on a purple dot representing a HesabPay agent in Afghanistan. Dozens of pale blue beneficiary wallets fanned out, showing recent transfers. Another click revealed where the money went next. Then one wallet pulsed red with a potential scam alert — an awkward moment in a live demo, but exactly the kind of risk the system is built to expose.

“From an aid donor perspective, that’s immensely valuable,” said Mr. Pont, who previously served as chief strategy officer at Mercy Corps. “A system that can automatically flag a fraud risk means you can check it out immediately instead of waiting six months for a report that somebody stole 20 grand.” No system is entirely corruption-proof, he conceded, but then again, a bag of cash is not, either.

Abdul Halim Hasan, 22, who was waiting in the same line as Ms. Almahmoud for his turn at the money changer in Syria, said he imagined that one day he could use HesabPay as a regular bank account, receiving funds, making payments and saving money safely. But for the moment, it was enough that his HesabPay card allowed him to gain access to money he needed to restart his life after war.

“I certainly want to see this method spread in Syria,” he said.

Leen Rihawi contributed reporting.

An Unlikely Source of Crypto Innovation: Afghanistan
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Donald Trump walks back comments about UK soldiers in Afghanistan

Donald Trump has said UK soldiers who fought in Afghanistan were “among the greatest of all warriors” after previously drawing criticism for his claims that Nato troops stayed away from the frontlines during the conflict.

In a post on social media on Saturday, the US president said: “The great and very brave soldiers of the United Kingdom will always be with the United States of America.

“In Afghanistan, 457 died, many were badly injured, and they were among the greatest of all warriors.

“It’s a bond too strong to ever be broken. The UK military, with tremendous heart and soul, is second to none (except for the USA). We love you all, and always will!”

The post came a day after Trump was criticised for his remarks that Nato allied troops “stayed a little off the frontlines” in Afghanistan.

Keir Starmer raised the comments directly with the US president in a conversation on Saturday, No 10 said.

A Downing Street spokesperson said: “The prime minister spoke to the president of the United States, Donald Trump, this afternoon.

“The prime minister raised the brave and heroic British and American soldiers who fought side by side in Afghanistan, many of whom never returned home. We must never forget their sacrifice, he said.

“As Ukraine approaches the fourth year of war since Russia’s full-scale invasion, the leaders agreed on the need to see progress towards a sustainable ceasefire.

“Whilst diplomatic efforts continue, the prime minister reiterated that international partners must continue to support Ukraine in its defence against [Vladimir] Putin’s barbaric attacks.

“The leaders also discussed the need for bolstered security in the Arctic, and the prime minister said it was an absolute priority for his government.

“The leaders discussed the importance of the UK-US relationship, which continues to stand the test of time. They agreed to speak soon.”

Also on Saturday, Italy’s prime minister, Giorgia Meloni, joined criticism of Trump’s comments on the role of non-US Nato troops in Afghanistan, defending the memory of Italian soldiers killed and wounded there.

“The Italian government was astonished to hear President Trump’s statement claiming that Nato allies ‘fell behind’ during operations in Afghanistan,” Meloni posted on X.

During the nearly 20 years of Nato operations in Afghanistan, she said, “our nation paid a cost that is beyond dispute: 53 Italian soldiers killed and more than 700 wounded”.

“For this reason, statements that downplay the contribution of Nato countries in Afghanistan are unacceptable, especially when they come from an allied Nation,” she added.

Meloni noted that the US had invoked article 5 of the North Atlantic treaty after the 11 September 2001 attacks on the country that killed 3,000 people, in effect launching the Afghanistan campaign.

Article 5 requires Nato member states to defend any of their number who come under attack.

Meloni acknowledged the strong ties between Italy and the US.

“But friendship requires respect, a fundamental condition for continuing to ensure the solidarity at the core of the Atlantic Alliance,” she added.

Earlier on Saturday, Italy’s foreign minister also paid tribute to Italy’s dead and wounded in Afghanistan in an online post.

AFP contributed to this report

Donald Trump walks back comments about UK soldiers in Afghanistan
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