Fears growing from Taliban as peace efforts move forward in Afghanistan

The Taliban movement is raising controversy once more, following the failure to sign a comprehensive peace agreement in the areas that witnessed some escalation in the past period.
The Taliban refused to participate in a conference in
Istanbul on means of bringing the conflict in Afghanistan to an end. The
conference was scheduled to be held in the period between April 24 and May 4.
Taliban's intransigence in the face of efforts to end
the conflict in Afghanistan comes as the United States prepares to withdraw its
troops in the country by 11 September.
NATO troops are also expected to pull out of
Afghanistan, for the first time since 2001.
Western countries are keen on reaching a deal with the
Taliban to ensure that the Afghan group would not follow in the footsteps of
al-Qaeda.
Analysts expect the Taliban to keep refusing to be
part of the aspired comprehensive peace deal in Afghanistan.
However, some other experts think the group will
accept to be part of the negotiations, but to demand a share in power.
Nevertheless, there are fears that the Taliban would
approve an agreement that keeps the current government in power, but then
returns to its violent activities soon after foreign troops leave Afghanistan.
Dangerous relationship
Al-Qaeda continues to be a dangerous organization,
even as it does not receive supplies as it did in the past.
This explains why Western countries are worried about
continued relations between the Taliban and al-Qaeda.
In October last year, a senior official of the United
Nations warned that al-Qaeda continued to be an international danger, even as
the Taliban had prevented it from staging attacks in Afghanistan.