The path toward this de facto cooperation has been widening for years. Since the EU Delegation in Kabul reopened in January 2022, European diplomats have held recurring informal talks in Doha and the UAE. The current friction centers on a proposed trade-off: the Taliban would facilitate the return of undocumented Afghans in exchange for control over Afghan consulates across Europe.
This shift is driven by the internal pressures of managing large migrant populations. Germany, which hosted 449,000 registered Afghans by the end of 2025, has become a bellwether for this policy change. Berlin recently handed the Bonn consulate and the embassy in Berlin to Taliban-aligned officials, using Qatari logistics to facilitate technical agreements. By processing the paperwork for deportations through these state-controlled channels, Germany has effectively bypassed the need for formal diplomatic recognition while securing a mechanism to return convicted criminals.
With Turkey demanding relief from migration pressures and anti-immigration sentiment rising across the European political spectrum, the status quo has become politically untenable. Critics argue that such concessions erode human rights leverage, yet the Taliban currently hold the stronger hand. As European member states move to replicate the German model to alleviate consular bottlenecks and manage border flows, the focus is shifting from idealism to the logistical realities of long-term engagement.

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