ISLAMABAD (Agencies)- The Ameer of Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) Baitullah Mehsud has declared that the peace talks with the govt have stalled due to a breakdown in the negotiations. According to a private TV channel, the peace dialogue between TTP and the govt was being carried out through Maulvi Faqir Muhammad and after a breakdown in the negotiations, TTP announced end to peace talks, and stressed that unless the forces did not totally vacate the tribal areas, it could not be resumed. Baitullah Mehsud alleged govt's insincerity over the peace talks terming it as a mere eyewash. He said that ANP President Asfandyar Wali was sincere to hold peace talks in the beginning, but now even he also looks helpless, therefore the ongoing peace talks with NWFP and Federal govt is declared null and void. AFP adds: Pakistan should stop 'terrorists' from using its soil to attack Afghanistan if it makes deals with Taliban along the troubled border, the Afghan defence ministry said Saturday. Islamabad has been trying to reach a peace deal with a Taliban commander on its side of the frontier. The militant halted talks last week because the government refused to withdraw its troops from his area. The Afghan defence ministry said it was concerned any such deal would not result in a cessation of violence in Afghanistan by militants said to be based in Pakistan and to cross the border to attack. The ministry cited media reports that a spokesman for the Pakistani Taliban vowed to continue the 'real jihad' in Afghanistan even if a peace deal was reached with Islamabad. "Afghanistan supports any action resulting in peace and stability in the region but only if such actions do not cause further terrorist activities in Afghanistan," it said. The ministry described a now-defunct 2006 deal between Pakistan and pro-Taliban militants in its Waziristan area as a 'bitter experience'. It had allowed militants "sufficient time to regroup, re-equip and mobilise themselves and take the lives of hundreds of children, women and men," it said, referring to a wave of extremist violence in both countries. "Afghanistan's biggest hope from the brotherly and friendly country of Pakistan is that its land be not used by terrorists against Afghanistan," it added.