Afghan Voice Agency (AVA) - Kabul: These statements of experts in international relations are made while the Pakistani media reported that a delegation of Pakistani scholars led by Maulana Fazlur Rahman, the head of Jamiat Ulema Islam of this country, is going to Kabul this week.
The Express Tribune newspaper, citing sources affiliated with Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam, has reported that the Interior and Foreign Ministries of Pakistan have finalized the preparations for various meetings that focus on dealing with the issue of Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan and resolving the tension between Kabul and Islamabad.
At the same time, the media in Afghanistan have reported that an Islamic Emirate delegation led by Mullah Shirin Akhund, the governor of Kandahar, arrived in Islamabad, the capital of this country, yesterday to talk with Pakistani officials. This delegation consists of officials from the Ministry of Defense, the Ministry of Information and culture and intelligence officials.
A joint meeting of the Pakistan-Afghanistan Coordination Council will also be held in Islamabad, and the Afghan delegation will also meet with Asif Durrani, Pakistan's special representative for Afghanistan. The delegation is also scheduled to meet officials of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and military officials of Pakistan.
Abuzar Siddiqui, an expert on international relations, said in a conversation with AVA that the citizens of Afghanistan and Pakistan have many commonalities and a long border from a religious and cultural point of view, for this reason Pakistani politicians are trying to have good relations with the Islamic Emirate and they know that with tension they will benefit interests. They do not reach
He added that Pakistan is in a bad economic and security situation and has become vulnerable to other countries in the region, adding that the country's leaders do not want to go to war with the Islamic Emirate over a series of issues such as the Pakistani Taliban (TTP) and the expulsion of Afghan immigrants. become tense
This expert on international relations added that Pakistani politicians know that they will not achieve their interests in Afghanistan through war and tension, so they are trying to resolve their differences through dialogue by sending a delegation.
Mr. Siddiqui pointed out that if the leaders of the two countries do not stop making tense statements, in the not too distant future verbal tensions will lead to major conflicts between Afghanistan and Pakistan and terrorist groups will grow more.
In addition, Haider Majidi, a political expert, also said in an interview with AVA: Because Afghanistan and Pakistan have the most trade in the region, breaking relations and tension will cause more crisis in these two countries, based on this, it is the best option for the current disputes. It is a way of dialogue.
He pointed out that Pakistan and Afghanistan can achieve their legitimate interests through dialogue, otherwise the tension between these countries will cause the expansion of terrorist groups' activities on the borders and no country will achieve its interests.
After the re-establishment of the Islamic Emirate in Afghanistan, the government of Pakistan has repeatedly claimed that the attacks of the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Taliban have increased in that country and that this group plans its attacks against Pakistan from Afghanistan, but the Islamic Emirate has always denied this claim of the Pakistani authorities. He rejects it and considers it unfounded.
This is despite the fact that the authorities of the Islamic Emirate have always said that they have brought the legitimate interests of all neighboring countries to Afghanistan.