The messages of the Samarkand meeting - there was no chance for the Taliban Abdul Naser Noorzad- national security and geopolitics researcher The Samarkand meeting is one of the regional reactions to the escalation of the security crisis in Afghanistan under the rule of international terrorism. Contrary to our imagination, this meeting was neither an opportunity for the Taliban nor a commitment to their recognition. On the contrary, the presence of the Taliban foreign minister was accompanied by diplomatic innuendos, preventive warnings based on the functional nature of the regional diplomacy of the allied forces, who see Afghanistan as a pit of security and geopolitical crisis. All countries, including Iran and Russia, are unhappy with the current situation in Afghanistan and have expressed their deep concern about the deterioration of the bad security situation towards the institutionalization of regional terrorism bases and drug trafficking networks. The foreign ministers of seven countries at the Samarqand meeting, while emphasizing the deterioration of the situation, announced that the security situation in Afghanistan is becoming more and more challenging and implied that the Taliban are unable to control the current situation due to the fragile state of their unpopular system. What does this message mean for the future of Afghanistan under the control of the Taliban? The literal translation of these statements was, in fact, the completion of the argument to the Taliban, regarding the change of performance, the formation of an inclusive system, and cutting ties with regional terrorism (the old allies of the Taliban), respecting human rights, and trying to create a political open space, which may be a new excuse. It will allow the competitors of the Asian allies to be present in the region and push the region towards a new foreign campaign and the presence of foreign forces in Afghanistan. For this purpose, the joint statement states that the presence of foreign forces and the establishment of military bases will no longer be tolerated, neither in Afghanistan nor in the region. In fact, this is