Speaking to reporters at an undisclosed location, Tehrik- e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) spokesman Shahidullah Shahid said the "war" was started by the government and it should take the lead in putting in place a ceasefire.
He said the TTP was ready for talks despite air strikes carried out in the tribal belt by the Pakistan Air Force.
About 40 militants were killed when combat jets bombed Taliban hideouts in North Waziristan and Khyber tribal regions. The air strikes were sanctioned by Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif after a Taliban faction executed 23 troops abducted in 2010.
But Shahid claimed the Taliban were "fighting in defence for 10 years" and said the government should stop its operation against the militants.
The Taliban want to resolve issues through talks but the government was more focussed on establishing its writ and the supremacy of the Constitution which, he claimed, did not have a single element reflecting Islamic injunctions.
The TTP is serious about dialogue and the negotiators representing it were more independent than those representing the government, Shahid said.
