Russia Says It’s Establishing ‘Full Partnership’ With Afghan Taliban

MOSCOW, May 14 (Reuters) – Russia is ⁠establishing ⁠a “full-fledged partnership” with ⁠Afghanistan’s ruling Taliban and is encouraging other ​countries in the region to expand cooperation with Kabul, a ‌senior Russian security official ‌was quoted on Thursday as saying.

Russia last ⁠year became ⁠the first country to formally recognise the Islamist Taliban ​government that seized power in August 2021 as U.S.-led forces staged a chaotic withdrawal from Afghanistan after 20 ​years of war.

Interfax news agency quoted Russian official Sergei ⁠Shoigu as ⁠saying cooperation with ⁠Kabul ​was important for the security and development of the region.

Shoigu, ​who is secretary ⁠of Russia’s Security Council, said Moscow was building a “pragmatic dialogue” with the Taliban that included security, trade, culture and humanitarian support.

He was speaking at a ⁠meeting with his counterparts from the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO), a ⁠10-member grouping that includes China, India, Iran, Pakistan and a number of ex-Soviet states.

The SCO should revive its contact group with Afghanistan, Shoigu added.

The Taliban was outlawed by Russia as a terrorist movement in 2003, but the ban was lifted in April 2025. Russia sees a need ⁠to work with Kabul as it faces a major security threat from Islamist militant groups based in a string of countries from Afghanistan to ​the Middle East.

(Reporting by Reuters; writing by Mark ​TrevelyanEditing by Gareth Jones)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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