Tehran communicates with Taliban government despite lack of recognition
The Iranian authorities are
communicating with the Taliban movement in Afghanistan despite not recognizing
its government. Mohammad Sadeq Motamedian, governor of Iran's Khorasan Razavi
province, paid an official visit to the Taliban-appointed governor of Herat
province, Abdul Qayyum Rohani.
Herat province is located in western
Afghanistan on the border with Iran, and this is the first visit of an Iranian
official to the eastern neighbor since the Taliban came to power on August 15.
Iranian state media highlighted this
visit, and Iranian state TV quoted Motamedian as saying, “Given the special
circumstances of the Afghan people, on this trip we will study the conditions
of the people in this country, and in particular their needs for the most
important humanitarian assistance. In order to carry out the required measures
accordingly, it is necessary to closely monitor the transit situation between
Afghanistan and Iran, especially the province of Khorasan Razavi, which has a
300-kilometer border with Afghanistan.”
The Dogaron border port, which is 18
km from the city of Taybad in the province of Khorasan Razavi in northeastern
Iran, is one of the most important commercial border crossings with Afghanistan
and is also a crossing for travelers.
Iran shares a long border with
Afghanistan of 921 km, and it has three ports for the transit of commercial
goods and travelers between the two countries. The volume of trade exchange
between the two countries reached about $4 billion last year.
Meanwhile, the Iranian news agency
Javan quoted Rohani as saying, “We (Iran and the Taliban) jointly defeated the
enemy of Iran and Afghanistan (the United States),” adding that the Taliban
established security checkpoints to secure the border between the two
countries.
According to Iranian Fars news
agency, Sher Ahmad Ammar, the Taliban’s deputy governor in Herat, vowed not to
allow any terrorist threats against Iran from his country, which came during
his meeting with the Iranian delegation from Khorasan Razavi.
Ammar added during the meeting that
the Taliban abides by all international laws and the laws of good
neighborliness and will never allow foreign individuals or groups such as ISIS
to use Afghan territory against neighboring Iran.
Relations between the two sides
worsened in early September following the attack launched by the Taliban on the
Panjshir Valley, the last stronghold of the armed Tajik opposition in
Afghanistan. Tehran strongly condemned this attack via its Foreign Ministry.
Tehran's relations with the Taliban
were turbulent and Iran never recognized the Taliban during the first period in
which it ruled Afghanistan between 1996 and 2001, and relations between the two
sides were tense at that time.