Reporting and analysis suggest France is reassessing how it engages Turkey, driven by the evolving European security environment and the uncertainty around external support. While Franco-Turkish relations have long been marked by rivalry and disagreement—particularly around the Eastern Mediterranean and wider regional competition—new circumstances are creating incentives for a more pragmatic approach.
A key theme is that several EU and European partners have moved toward strategic engagement with Turkey as part of broader efforts to strengthen defence planning and deter Russia. In this context, Paris is weighing whether to “turn a new page” in relations rather than rely on existing, largely stagnant channels.
Analysts argue that any reset would likely require turning diplomacy into structured cooperation—especially on security and regional theatres that matter to Europe, such as the Black Sea. The discussion also points to the possibility of building more durable frameworks for coordination (beyond crisis-by-crisis management), potentially including dialogue formats and working groups focused on defence and other areas where cooperation could be made more systematic.
At the same time, the material stresses that major obstacles remain. France is unlikely to fully drop its positions in disputes with Turkey, and long-running mistrust—sometimes intensified by political friction between top leaders—could continue to limit how far détente can go.
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