The US Special Representative for Afghan Reconciliation, Zalmay Khalilzad, began a visit to Qatar and the region, while the head of the Afghan Reconciliation Committee, Abdullah Abdullah, is visiting Pakistan.

According to a US State Department statement, Khalilzad will meet with Afghan negotiation delegations in Doha, within the framework of US support to reach a settlement that ends the conflict in Afghanistan.

The US representative will discuss prospects for development and trade after reaching a peace agreement.

On the other hand, the head of the Afghan Reconciliation Committee, Abdullah Abdullah, is visiting Pakistan, on a mission aimed at repairing the deep-rooted mistrust between the two countries.

Abdullah met during the three-day visit - which began on Monday, Monday - with Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan, the army chief, and other officials.

Khan pledged - in a statement issued after the meeting - that his country would provide support to Afghanistan after the end of the war in it, and during his meeting with Abdullah stressed the need for all Afghan parties to work to reduce violence and cease fire, and said that his country would support everything that Afghans agree on regarding the future. Their country.

On the 12th of this month, peace negotiations were launched between the Afghan government and the Taliban movement in the Qatari capital, Doha, with a large international and regional presence, in a step described as historic and serious towards establishing sustainable peace in Afghanistan.

Afghanistan has been suffering from a war since October 2001, when an international military coalition led by Washington overthrew the Taliban, due to its association at the time with al-Qaeda, which adopted the September 11 attacks of the same year in the United States.