Spokesperson says Taliban used talks to malign Pakistan with hypothetical accusations instead of finding solutions
Police officers stand guard at the main entry gate of Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Islamabad. Photo: File
Pakistan criticised Afghanistan’s Taliban regime for failing to act against terrorist groups launching cross-border attacks and for ignoring commitments made during dialogue, warning that “hollow promises and inaction” were undermining regional peace despite repeated diplomatic efforts.
In a statement issued in response to media queries on Sunday, the Foreign Office said the third round of Pakistan-Afghanistan talks, held in Istanbul on November 7 and mediated by Turkiye and Qatar, ended without progress as the Taliban delegation “avoided taking any measures on ground.”
“Pakistan deeply appreciates the sincere efforts made by brotherly Turkiye and Qatar to mediate the differences between Pakistan and Afghanistan on the core issue of terrorism emanating from Afghan soil,” the spokesperson said.
The statement said that since the Taliban regime took control of Kabul in 2021, Pakistan had faced “a sharp surge in terrorist attacks emanating from Afghan soil,” mostly by the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) and its affiliates.
“Despite suffering military and civilian casualties, Pakistan exercised maximum restraint and did not retaliate,” the spokesperson said, adding that Islamabad had expected the Taliban to curb the TTP’s activities.
Pakistan said it had extended goodwill to Afghanistan through trade concessions, humanitarian aid, and visa facilitation, but accused the Taliban regime of “hollow promises and inaction.”
“Instead of acting upon the core expectation from Pakistan — not to allow Afghan territory to be used for attacks against Pakistan — the Taliban regime has always tried to shy away from taking concrete and verifiable actions,” the statement read.
Islamabad maintained that its limited cross-border military response in October 2025 was “a manifestation of the will and determination that Pakistan will not leave any stone unturned to safeguard its territory and its people.”
“Anyone harbouring, abetting or financing [the TTP/FaK or BLA/FaH] is not considered a friend and well-wisher of Pakistan,” it warned.
The statement said Pakistan agreed to participate in the Turkiye- and Qatar-mediated dialogue to “give peace and diplomacy every possible chance.” However, the Taliban regime used the talks to prolong the ceasefire “without taking concrete and verifiable actions.”
“Instead of finding solutions to address Pakistan’s core concern, Afghan regime used the opportunity to malign Pakistan through hypothetical accusations and jingoistic rhetoric. It prolonged discussions and engaged in futile arguments to stonewall the efforts at reaching any concrete understanding,” it said.
The statement further added that the Taliban regime were “misrepresenting the issue of Pakistani terrorists hiding in Afghanistan as a humanitarian issue.”
“These terrorists and their families are now being harboured by the Taliban regime as a payback for their allegiance,” it said, adding that Pakistan was willing to receive its nationals “provided they are handed over at border crossings, not hurled across the border fully equipped with sophisticated weapons.”
Islamabad reiterated that it would not hold dialogue with terrorist groups such as the TTP or BLA, but only with the government in Kabul.
استنبول مذاکرات پر وزارتِ خارجہ کا واضح اور دو ٹوک موقف
وزارت خارجہ کا افغانستان سے متعلق جامع اور شواہد پر مبنی مؤقف
وزارت خارجہ نے پاک۔افغان تعلقات کا مکمل پس منظر شواہد کے ساتھ دنیا کے سامنے رکھ دیا
پاکستان کا مؤقف تعصب سے بالاتر، حقائق اور میرٹ پر مبنی ہے، سفارتی ذرائع… pic.twitter.com/X5vaxBBpyE
— PTV News (@PTVNewsOfficial) November 9, 2025
The statement also said some elements within the Taliban regime of being “supported by foreign actors to stoke tensions” and of using “anti-Pakistan rhetoric to unite their fractious government.”
“There is absolute clarity among the people of Pakistan that the ordinary people of Pakistan are the biggest victims of terrorist activities by elements hiding in Afghanistan,” the spokesperson said. “The entire Pakistani nation is with its Armed Forces to safeguard the interests and lives of the people of Pakistan.”
Pakistan urged the Taliban to end its “well-documented support” for terrorist groups operating against it and said the regime could “neither deny nor absolve itself” of responsibility for the rise in cross-border terrorism.
While reaffirming its preference for diplomacy, Islamabad warned that its patience was not limitless. “Pakistan remains committed to resolution of bilateral differences through dialogue,” the statement concluded. “However, Pakistan’s core concern — terrorism emanating from Afghanistan — needs to be addressed first and foremost.”
