President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan on Friday said Turkey has held its first talks with the Taliban in Kabul, adding that Ankara was still assessing the Islamist group’s offer to run the Afghan capital’s airport, Agence France-Presse reported.
The Turkish leader said the talks were held at a military section of the Kabul airport where the Turkish embassy is temporarily stationed.
“We have held our first talks with the Taliban, which lasted 3.5 hours,” Erdoğan told reporters. “If necessary, we will have the opportunity to hold such talks again.”
Responding to domestic criticism over Turkey’s engagement with the insurgent group, Erdoğan said Ankara had “no luxury” to stand idly by in the volatile region.
“You cannot know what their expectations are or what our expectations are without talking. What’s diplomacy, my friend? This is diplomacy,” Erdoğan said.
Turkey had been planning to help secure and run Kabul’s strategic airport, but on Wednesday, it started pulling troops out of Afghanistan — an apparent sign of Ankara’s abandoning this goal.
Erdoğan said the Taliban now wanted to oversee security at the airport, while offering Ankara the option of running its logistics.
But he said the suicide bombs that killed at least 85 people, including 13 US troops, outside the airport during in the last days of urgent evacuation effort Thursday showed the importance of knowing the details of how the air hub will be secured.
“They said: ‘We will ensure the security, you operate (the airport’. We have not made any decision on this issue yet,” Erdoğan said.
“We will make a decision once calm prevails.”