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Any international legitimacy, support will have to be earned: US warns Taliban

US secretary of state Antony Blinken said that the country is doing everything in their power to enable further evacuations from Afghanistan, now controlled by Taliban.

Published on: Sep 8, 2021, 23:21:06 IST
ANI | Posted by , Hindustan Times, New Delhi
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A day after the Taliban announced the interim government of Afghanistan, the United States on Wednesday said that the outfit would have to work for the right to be regarded by the international community as a legitimate government.

US secretary of state Antony Blinken said that he has discussed with allied partners on how to hold the Taliban to their commitments in Afghanistan.
US secretary of state Antony Blinken said that he has discussed with allied partners on how to hold the Taliban to their commitments in Afghanistan.

The remarks were made by US secretary of state Antony Blinken after holding bilateral talks with German counterpart Heiko Mass at the Ramstein Air Base in western Germany. After bilateral talks, the two leaders also had a virtual meeting with foreign ministers of several countries and NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg.

"The Taliban seek international legitimacy. Any legitimacy -- any support -- will have to be earned," Blinken said, after the meeting.

Blinken told reporters that he discussed with partners how to hold the Taliban to their commitments, DW reported.

He also responded to criticism that the US administration was not making enough effort to facilitate further evacuations, vowing to put pressure on the Taliban to start charter flights out of Afghanistan.

"We are working to do everything in our power to support those flights and to get them off the ground," he said.

Also Read | US working with Taliban to enable charter flight ops from Kabul, says Blinken

Blinken said the group was preventing some flights from leaving because some people wanting to fly out did not have the correct documentation.

Taliban on Tuesday announced the caretaker government of the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan, naming Mullah Mohammad Hassan Akhund as interim prime minister and Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar, a co-founder of the group, as his deputy.

Mullah Yaqoob, one of the deputy leaders of the Taliban since 2016 and the son of Taliban founder Mullah Omar, will act as caretaker Defence Minister. Abdul Salam Hanafi has been made the second deputy to Prime Minister Akhund.

No non-Taliban figures were immediately announced- an indication that the outfit had not bowed down to domestic and international pressure to create an inclusive regime.

Also Read | Inside look at Taliban all-male cabinet: Minister wanted by FBI, with a bounty on his head

Maas, in his turn, said the non-inclusive interim government announced by the Taliban was "not the signal for more international cooperation and stability in the country."

"We hope that in the further formation of a government, which has not been completed, the necessary signals for this will be sent," he added

Maas had said previously that the goal of Wednesday's meeting was "to clarify what a joint approach toward the Taliban can look like."

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