Washington: The United States said on Tuesday that one of the many concerns about Afghanistan was that it could spin into the civil war.
Because the United States announced plans in April to withdraw its troops unconditionally on September 11 after nearly 20 years of conflict, violence has increased throughout the country because the Taliban look for more regions.
The peace talk between the Afghan government and the Taliban negotiator began last year in the capital of Qatar Doha, but had not made substantive progress.
US State Department spokesman, Ned’s price said the Taliban saw “negotiated solution utilities, they were involved in Doha.” “If they try to conflict with what they have said, then they will become an international pariah …
and their concern for all of us, one of the many concerns is that the results will be civil war,” representatives told reporters.
The Taliban and Afghan government was far apart from DOHA talks, with rebels demanding “the share of Lion’s power” in every new government, US special envoy Zalmay Khalilzad said earlier on Tuesday.
The car bomb explosion was followed by a shot of sporadic shots hit the capital of Afghanistan Kabul on Tuesday near “Green Zone,” leaving three civilians and three attackers, security officials said.
“It does bear all the advantages of a series of Taliban attacks that we have seen in recent weeks,” said price.
“We expressly condemn the bombing.” In a statement on Tuesday condemned the attack on the United Nations in Afghanistan last week, the UN Security Council also “expressed their deep concern about the high level of violence in Afghanistan after the Taliban military attack, and called for immediate violent reduction.” The council called the Taliban and the Afghan government for “It is significantly involved in an inclusive peace process, led by Afghanistan.”