Taliban fighters have launched an assault on the provincial capital of Qala-e-Naw, their first bid to seize a large city since the US started withdrawing its troops. Meanwhile, Iran hosted surprise peace talks in Tehran.
Afghan authorities claimed Qala-e Naw, the capital of Afghanistan's western Bagdhis province, suffered a Taliban assault from three sides early on Wednesday.
"They entered some parts of the city, but later on the enemy was faced with a strong reaction," said provisional governor Husamuddin Shams. The Reuters news agency reported reprisal airstrikes and evictions by Afghan special forces.
Earlier, AFP had quoted Shams as saying "all the districts [in Qala-e-Naw] have fallen." Other provincial officials said Taliban entered police headquarters and 200 prisoners escaped a central Bagdhis jail. Local residents had fled toward Herat, a neighboring Afghan province.
Afghan Defense Ministry spokesman Fawad Aman vowed that the insurgents would be evicted. The Taliban itself did not publicly comment on fighting in Qala-e-Naw.
The ministry claimed that the insurgents incurred heavy casualties while dozens of pro-government troops had been killed.
Wednesday's battle coincided with surprise talks hosted in neighboring Iran between Taliban envoys and Kabul government officials, including former Afghan Vice President Younus Qanooni.
Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif urged Taliban and government intermediaries to "take difficult decisions today for the future of their country," according to Iranian state media. Zarif also criticized the "failure" of the US in Afghanistan.