'Dear Tayyip': Macron, Erdoğan exchange letters, agree to resume talks

Turkish President Erdoğan and his French counterpart Emmanuel Macron exchanged letters and agreed to resume talks. "Earlier this week we received Macron's letter. Very positive. Macron started his letter with a Turkish salutation, handwritten, 'Dear Tayyip,'" Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu said.

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Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and French President Emmanuel Macron have exchanged letters in which they have agreed to resume talks aimed at mending ties.

Erdoğan wrote a New Year message to Macron, expressing condolences for several attacks in France last year, Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu said on Jan. 15. 

Macron sent back a “very positive” letter this week, starting with the greeting “Dear Tayyip” and saying he was open to a meeting, Çavuşoğlu said.

"Earlier this week we received Macron's letter. Very positive. Macron started his letter with a Turkish salutation, handwritten, 'Dear Tayyip,'" Çavuşoğlu said. 

"President Macron expresses the importance of Turkey for Europe and his will to develop positive ties with Turkey as well as to meet our president in the coming period,” he added. 

Macron’s response proposed collaboration over “bilateral consultations, terrorism, regional issues such as Syria and Libya, and a partnership on education," according to the top diplomat. 

The French presidency confirmed the exchange of letters without providing details.

“We now need tangible gestures” from Ankara, the French presidency said.

The European Union is now drawing up an expanded list of Turkish individuals to sanction for Ankara’s decision to drill for natural gas in eastern Mediterranean waters near Cyprus.

Last year, Ankara and Paris sparred over a host of international issues, including the conflicts in Syria, Libya and Nagorno-Karabakh.

The diplomatic tensions have been accompanied by a bitter personal feud between the two presidents. 

At a meeting with EU leaders, Macron remarked that Turks “deserve something else” than the policies of Erdoğan.

In October, Macron said Islam was a religion “in crisis” globally, triggering a harsh response in the Muslim world, which called for a boycott of French products.

Erdoğan joined the call and said, on two different occasions, that Macron needed a mental health checkup.

He also accused Macron of “Islamaphobia” and urged French voters to “get rid of Macron as soon as possible." 

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