The three-day talks opened on Sunday with talks ... in Afghanistan high on their agenda, along with the West's recurring demand for the Taliban administration to share power with Afghanistan's ...
The Taliban and Western diplomats have begun their first official talks in Europe since the group ... capped mountains above the Norwegian capital Oslo. Taliban representatives will be certain ...
Ultimately, the Taliban need the West, on which it continues to rely for humanitarian aid, but which has frozen Afghanistan’s international assets abroad amid a brutal financial crisis in the ...
A US-Taliban peace agreement seems closer than ever, but the whole thing could unravel when it comes time for intra-Afghan talks. The U.S., Afghan government, and Taliban will all need to readjust ...
AFGHANISTAN'S Taliban insurgents have suspended peace talks with the United States because of the "shaky, erratic and vague" US position. US and Taliban negotiators were believed to have had ...
Taliban authorities said on Saturday their participation in UN-convened Afghanistan talks would be “unbeneficial” if certain ...
The Taliban will not be part of the UN-led international talks on situation in Afghanistan. The regime has not been invited for the talks that are expected to focus on women's rights in the crisis ...
The Taliban have held secret meetings with Afghan officials to discuss a ceasefire, the US military says. The US commander in Afghanistan, Gen John Nicholson, said the talks also involved foreign ...
WASHINGTON: The United States and Afghanistan´s Taliban on Sunday both left the door open to fresh talks after President Donald Trump abruptly canceled a secret summit, but the insurgents ...
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan (CNN)-- Afghan and Pakistani tribal leaders have agreed to seek talks with Taliban leaders and other militant groups, so long as they promise to abide by the laws of each country.
(CNN)-- Since Afghan officials met with former Taliban leaders in Mecca, Saudi Arabia a month ago the drum beat of hammering out a political deal with the Taliban rather than smashing them ...
The US insists the meeting does not mean recognition of the Taliban, who now control Afghanistan. Republican Senator Lindsey Graham believes there will be no choice as "the threat will be so large".