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Pakistan, Afghanistan set to begin third round of talks in Istanbul

Pakistan and the Afghan Taliban are set to resume their third round of talks in Istanbul today to address cross-border terrorism and implement a fragile ceasefire agreed after October border clashes. Delegations, mediated by Turkiye and Qatar, aim to finalise a monitoring and verification mechanism for lasting peace.

ANI Nov 06, 2025 14:11 IST googleads

Signing of the bilateral agreement between Pakistan and Afghanistan (File Photo: X/@MofaQatar_EN)

Islamabad [Pakistan], November 6 (ANI): Pakistan is set to resume talks with Afghan Taliban representatives in Istanbul today in a third round of engagement aimed at ending cross-border terrorism and consolidating a fragile ceasefire that was initially agreed upon after border clashes last month, Dawn said.
Since the skirmishes between October 11 and 15, Pakistan and Afghan Taliban representatives have held two rounds of talks, first in Doha and then in Istanbul, but a final agreement has not yet been reached, Dawn added.
For the third round, under the joint mediation of Turkiye and Qatar, delegations from both sides arrived in Istanbul on Wednesday. The talks are expected to continue for two days.
Pakistan's delegation is being led by Lt Gen Asim Malik, Director General of the Inter-Services Intelligence, and includes senior officials from the military, intelligence agencies, and the Foreign Office, Dawn reported.
The Afghan Taliban's delegation includes General Directorate of Intelligence chief Abdul Haq Waseq, Deputy Interior Minister Rehmatullah Najib, Taliban spokesperson Suhail Shaheen, Anas Haqqani, Qahar Balkhi, Zakir Jalali, and Afghanistan's charge d'affaires in Ankara.
A joint statement released by the Turkish foreign ministry following the last round of talks said that "all parties have agreed on continuation of ceasefire" and "to put in place a monitoring and verification mechanism that will ensure maintenance of peace and impose a penalty on the violating party."
The communique further stated that "the principals" from both sides would reconvene in Istanbul on November 6 to discuss implementation.
Earlier, a diplomat from one of the mediating countries told Dawn on the condition of anonymity that the two sides will review the implementation of the commitments reached during the previous round of talks and attempt to finalise the modalities for the monitoring and verification mechanism agreed in principle last week.
Officials in both Islamabad and Kabul have kept expectations low about the upcoming dialogue. Pakistani military and intelligence officials have stated that Islamabad's position remains unchanged, that Afghan soil must not be used for terrorism against Pakistan.
"The Pakistan military and intelligence service have a single-point agenda -- the end of terrorism," military spokesman Lt Gen Ahmed Sharif Chaudhry said earlier this week.
Another security official, speaking on anonymity, said Islamabad seeks "concrete, verifiable guarantees," Dawn reported.
Talks between Pakistan and the Afghan Taliban follow weeks of shuttle diplomacy after deadly border clashes last month plunged relations between the two neighbours to their lowest point since the Taliban seized power in Kabul in 2021.
The hostilities began when an attack was launched on Pakistan from Afghanistan on the night of October 11. The attack followed an allegation from the Taliban of airstrikes by Pakistan into Afghanistan, which Islamabad has neither confirmed nor denied.
Meanwhile, Pakistan continues to grapple with terrorism and has suffered multiple casualties among security forces in intelligence-based operations. After the initial skirmish on October 11, multiple others took place along the Pakistan-Afghanistan border. Strikes by Islamabad also targeted Gul Bahadur group camps in Afghanistan.
A ceasefire was agreed upon on the evening of October 15, and eventually, the two sides came together for dialogue in Doha. After the Doha talks, a temporary ceasefire continued to prevent border hostilities while the two sides committed to reconvene in Istanbul to work on mechanisms for lasting peace and stability between the two countries.
The second round of talks between the two sides began in the Turkish capital on October 25. However, Information Minister Attaullah Tarar announced in a post on X on October 29 that the talks "failed to bring about any workable solution." He also asserted that Pakistan would continue to take all possible measures to protect its citizens from terrorism, Dawn reported.
The information minister had said Pakistan had repeatedly engaged with the Afghan Taliban regarding "persistent cross-border terrorism."
"The Afghan Taliban regime has been asked time and again to fulfil their written commitments to Pakistan and to the international community in the Doha Agreement. However, Pakistan's fervent efforts proved futile due to the Afghan Taliban regime's unabated support to anti-Pakistan terrorists," Tarar had stated.
Mediators Turkiye and Qatar intervened and managed to salvage the dialogue process, with an October 31 joint statement released by Turkiye stating that "further modalities of the implementation will be discussed and decided" during a principal-level meeting in Istanbul on November 6. (ANI)

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