Afghan Taliban open to talks after Pakistan bombs Kabul, Kandahar

Taliban soldiers load a rocket launcher in a vehicle, following exchanges of fire between Pakistan and Afghanistan forces, near Torkham border in Afghanistan, February 27, 2026. REUTERS/Stringer TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY
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Updated 28 February 2026
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Afghan Taliban open to talks after Pakistan bombs Kabul, Kandahar

  • Clashes follow Afghan retaliatory strikes on Thursday night
  • Both sides report heavy losses, issue conflicting ‌tolls

KABUL/ISLAMABAD: Afghanistan’s Taliban rulers said on Friday they were willing to negotiate after Pakistan bombed their forces in major cities and said the allies-turned-foes were in “open war.”
Pakistan struck the Afghan capital Kabul, the city of Kandahar, ​where Taliban leaders are based, and other towns, a Taliban spokesman said. The attacks were its first directly targeting Afghanistan’s government over allegations it harbors militants seeking to overthrow the Islamabad government.
Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said there were civilian casualties on Friday but did not provide details. In Kabul, thick plumes of black smoke rose from two sites and a huge blaze was also visible in video verified by Reuters. Reuters witnesses said many ambulance sirens could be heard following loud blasts and the sound of jets on Friday.
Kabul taxi driver Tamim said an ammunition depot was hit and explosions continued inside after the strikes as stored ordnance ignited.
“The plane came and dropped two bombs, then flew away again. After that, we heard explosions,” said Tamim, who was asleep when the strikes hit. “Everyone, in panic, ran down from the second floor of the house.”
Security sources in Pakistan said the strikes involved air-to-ground missile attacks on ‌Taliban military offices ‌and posts in response to Afghan attacks on Thursday.
The latest violence erupted after Pakistan’s airstrikes on Afghan ​territory ‌last weekend ⁠triggered ​Afghan ⁠retaliatory attacks along the border on Thursday, escalating long-simmering tensions over Pakistan’s claim that Afghanistan shelters Pakistani Taliban militants. Afghanistan denies this.
The Taliban said on Friday their leaders were ready to negotiate with Pakistan.
“The Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan has always tried to resolve issues through dialogue, and now also we want to resolve this matter through dialogue,” Mujahid said.




Taliban soldiers sit next to an anti-aircraft gun while on lookout for Pakistan's fighter jets, in Khost province, Afghanistan, on February 27, 2026. (REUTERS)

Mujahid said Pakistani strikes hit parts of Kabul, Kandahar and Paktia on Thursday night, and on Paktia, Paktika, Khost and Laghman on Friday.
That followed Afghan drone strikes that began late on Thursday on Pakistani military positions and installations in northwest Pakistan along their shared border.
Pakistani officials said the country’s strikes killed 274 Taliban officials and militants while Afghanistan said it killed 55 Pakistani soldiers — figures which Reuters was unable to verify.
Pakistan confirmed that 12 of its own soldiers were killed and ⁠Afghanistan said it had lost 13 Taliban fighters.

US backs Pakistan, UN chief urges end to fighting
For years, Islamabad has blamed Afghanistan for attacks inside Pakistan aimed at overthrowing the government, claiming ‌the Taliban shelter Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan fighters.
Islamabad says TTP leaders operate from Afghan territory and use it as ​a safe haven to plan cross-border assaults. While the United Nations has ‌said the TTP and the Taliban in Afghanistan are linked, the Kabul government denies this and argues Pakistan is deflecting blame for its own ‌security failures.
In New York, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres was “deeply concerned by the escalation of violence” between Afghanistan and Pakistan and the impact that is having on civilian populations, his spokesperson Stephane Dujarric said.
“He calls for an immediate cessation of hostilities, and he reiterates his call on the parties to resolve any differences through diplomacy,” Dujarric said. The United States on Friday expressed support for Pakistan.
“The United States supports Pakistan’s right to defend itself against attacks from the Taliban, a Specially Designated Global Terrorist group,” a ‌State Department spokesperson said.
“The Taliban have consistently failed to uphold their counterterrorism commitments, allowing violence to destabilize the region while terrorist groups use Afghanistan as a launching pad for their heinous attacks.”
The strikes threatened to ⁠unleash a protracted conflict along the 2,600-km (1,615-mile) ⁠frontier between Afghanistan and Pakistan.
“Our cup of patience has overflowed. Now it is open war between us and you (Afghanistan),” Pakistani Defense Minister Khawaja Muhammad Asif said on Friday.
Pakistan’s foreign ministry warned that any new Taliban provocations, or attempts by any “terrorist group” to target Pakistanis, would be met with a “measured, decisive and befitting response.” Pakistan is nuclear-armed and its military capabilities are vastly superior to those of Afghanistan. However, the Taliban are adept at guerrilla warfare, hardened by decades of fighting with US-led forces, before returning to power in 2021.
Afghan Foreign Minister Amir Khan Muttaqi spoke by telephone on Friday with Qatar’s Mohammed bin Abdulaziz Al-Khulaifi, the junior foreign minister, the Afghan ministry said in a statement.
Qatar, which helped stop fighting between the two countries last year, is working with other nations to help resolve the latest crisis, Afghanistan said.
“Afghanistan has never been a supporter of violence and has always preferred to resolve issues based on mutual understanding and respect,” Muttaqi told Khulaifi in their call, the statement said.
Clashes between Pakistan and Afghanistan in October killed dozens of soldiers until negotiations facilitated by Turkiye, Qatar and Saudi Arabia brought an end to the hostilities.
The UN spokesman said nearly half of Afghanistan’s population, or 22 million people, need humanitarian aid and ​the number would rise if fighting continues or worsens.


US ‘totally stupid’ to attack Iran during talks: UN ambassador

Updated 03 March 2026
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US ‘totally stupid’ to attack Iran during talks: UN ambassador

  • “War was not our option. War was imposed on Iran,” Bahreini told UN correspondents
  • “Nobody should expect Iran to show restraint in front of aggression”

GENEVA: The United States made a “totally stupid decision” to attack Iran while in negotiations, and betrayed Gulf nations by trashing their diplomatic efforts, Tehran’s UN ambassador said Tuesday.
Ali Bahreini, Iran’s ambassador in Geneva, insisted Tehran had no problem with its neighbors, but could not let US bases in the Gulf be used as launchpads for attacks on Iran.
“War was not our option. War was imposed on Iran,” Bahreini told UN correspondents.
“Nobody should expect Iran to show restraint in front of aggression.
“We will continue our defense until the point that this aggression is stopped,” he said.
On February 26, Washington and Tehran held indirect negotiations in Geneva on Iran’s nuclear program — with the Omani mediators reporting “significant progress.”
Bahreini was present for part of those talks and said “everybody was optimistic” and the US team “agreed to continue negotiations” in Vienna this week.
But Bahreini said Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had convinced US President Donald Trump to destroy diplomacy and attack Iran, with strikes starting on Saturday.
“It was a totally stupid decision. They will know in the future how stupid this decision has been. Both of them will understand, because Iran will firmly determine the situation and the destiny of this war,” he said.
“All our neighbors are now disappointed with the betrayal of the United States because everybody was working for diplomacy, particularly Oman.
“The US betrayed everybody.”

- ‘Not a regional war’ -

Tehran has launched strikes against countries in the region that host US bases.
“I cannot accept labelling what we are doing as reprisal. What we are doing is a kind of self-defense,” said Bahreini.
The ambassador said Iran’s problem was not with its neighbors, describing the Gulf countries as friends.
“We are in daily dialogue with our neighbors to convey to them the message that this war is not a war against our neighbors.
“This is not a regional war.
“But we cannot ignore the fact that the US bases in their lands are operational against us.
“In no way we can allow those bases to be used to make military operations against Iran.”
He said Iran’s operations were “exclusively” against US military targets, and said “there has been very serious order given to our military forces not to make any harm to civilians.”
Trump claimed Tuesday that the Iranian leadership “want to talk” but Bahreini insisted no approach had been made to Washington, saying “there hasn’t been any contact from our side” since the war erupted.