The Taliban's political office was unofficially established in Doha in January 2012, with the arrival of representatives including
Tayyab Agha,
Sher Mohammad Abbas Stanikzai and
Shahabuddin Delawar, who were said to be "well-educated, fluent in English and considered moderate, but committed to the movement", plus spokesperson
Suhail Shaheen. In March 2012, Taliban representatives there suspended talks with the U.S. government. They demanded that the U.S. release five Taliban soldiers and leaders in exchange for the freedom of captured
U.S. Army Sgt.
Bowe Bergdahl, held prisoner by the Taliban since 2009. By June 2013, the number of Taliban representatives in Qatar had increased, with over 20 high-ranking members and their families living in the Gulf state. They kept a low profile, though they had been seen at mosques, shopping malls, and visiting the Afghanistan embassy to register births or renew documents. Their homes were paid for by the Qataris. The Qatari government found a villa on the outskirts of Doha for the Taliban and it opened officially as their political office on 18 June 2013. However, there was an immediate issue, as the
Taliban flag was raised and a plaque at the entrance identified it as an office of the "
Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan" (the Taliban-era name for the country). Afghan president Karzai halted peace talks claiming that the Taliban were presenting their office as the embassy of a government in exile. but the Taliban shut the offices, claiming they had been lied to by the U.S. and Afghanistan. In June 2015, the
New York Times released an exposé on the Taliban 5, making it known for the first time that two of them were accused of mass murder, one of defending the killing of foreigners, that another is an opium drug lord with known ties to
Osama bin Laden, and that the last was described as one of the founders of the Taliban. Members of
Afghanistan's High Peace Council argue that the five should remain in Qatar indefinitely or be handed over to the Afghan government. Members of the U.S. congress have expressed concern over what will happen when the travel ban ends and they can no longer be monitored by the Qatari government. In August 2015, the head of the office, Tayyab Agha, resigned, citing "internal factional struggles to seize control of the leadership." "The death of
Mullah Omar was kept secret for two years", Agha said. "I consider this a historical mistake." During and up to this time, the Taliban was experiencing internal ruptures in their ranks over who should be appointed the new leader of the Taliban. with
Abdul Salam Hanafi as his deputy. News sources took the permanent appointment as a sign that peace talks with Afghanistan would soon resume. In December 2015, rumors began to spread that the Taliban 5 had recommenced their "threatening activities" after being released to Qatar. According to a U.S. intelligence committee and a U.S. House report, "Despite the current restrictions of the MOU, it is clear … that the five former detainees have participated in activities that threaten U.S. and coalition personnel and are counter to U.S. national security interests – not unlike their activities before they were detained on the battlefield." In April 2016, members of Taliban in Qatar issued a statement denying media reports that the Taliban was exploring the possibility of peace talks with the Afghan government. According to Taliban officials in Qatar, the Taliban was not entertaining peace negotiations at this time. Rather, the group was focused on the release of Taliban prisoners as well as issues along the border between Pakistan and Afghanistan. In March, the Taliban refused to engage with talks with Afghanistan, Pakistan, China, and the U.S., calling such discussions, "futile."
On 5 June 2017, a quartet composed of Saudi Arabia, the
United Arab Emirates,
Bahrain and
Egypt cut diplomatic ties with Qatar. The main reason cited for the severing of links was Qatar's alleged financing and hosting of Islamic extremist groups, including the Taliban. In response, a Qatari government officially denied that Qatar supported the Taliban, and claimed that they hosted the Taliban after being requested to do so by the US government. As of January 2019 in the ongoing Afghan peace talks, the Taliban have asked for international recognition of their Doha office. On 25 October 2018, the Taliban confirmed that Pakistan released
Abdul Ghani Baradar. He was subsequently appointed to be the chief of the Taliban's political office in Doha. Washington special envoy
Zalmay Khalilzad claimed that Baradar was released at the request of the United States. ==Criticism==