The Taliban group is present in most of Afghanistan’s provinces and controls more than a half of its territory, Russian president’s special envoy to Afghanistan and director of the Russian foreign ministry’s second Asia department, Zamir Kabulov, said in an interview with the Kommersant daily on Sunday.
“Taliban is very integrated into Afghanistan’s military and political life. It controls more than a half of the country’s territory by now,” he said.
According to the Russian diplomat, the group is present in most of the country’s provinces and is a key force even where an official administration is present. “As a matter of fact, they establish parallel power bodies, including a court system Afghan people have more confidence in than in the official one,” he claimed.
“So, in this sense, they are very integrated into Afghanistan’s state life,” he added.
According to Kabulov, militants from the terrorist group Islamic State are present in nine out of Afghanistan’s 34 provinces.
“So far, luckily, they are present only in nine Afghan provinces. But what we are worried about most of all that these are northern Afghan provinces bordering Central Asia,” he said. “It is a serious threat for us. So, we cannot play down the Islamic State threat.”
“History, including Afghan history, teaches us that problems must be resolved before they grow into a serious threat,” the diplomat noted.
Kabulov also said that Russia will invite representatives of the Taliban to a Moscow-format meeting on Afghanistan to be held before the end of this summer.
“In order to facilitate the process of launching negotiations we, already last year, we initiated dialogue of the so-called Moscow format. By the end of this summer, we will organize another meeting in this format, but it needs thorough preparations to yield, if not a breakthrough, but a visible result. We want it to be the beginning of real progress, which is possible only when Taliban begins to speak with the Afghan government or with a more or less broad spectrum of the Afghan establishment,” he said.
According to Kabulov, the problem is that Taliban considers Afghanistan’s current government “as a puppet one installed by the Americans, and, hence, illegitimate.” “They don’t’ want to hold talks with it but want to negotiate separately with the Americans,” he noted.
He stressed that the key goal of the Moscow format is to help launch dialogue between the Afghan government and Taliban. “If we don’t invite Taliban, there will be no dialogue,” the Russian diplomat said. “That is why we hope Taliban will come to the meeting.”
The Moscow format involves representatives from Afghanistan, India, Iran, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, China, Pakistan, Russia, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan. The previous round of consultations was held in April 2017.