[4] Amenhotep II's son, Thutmose IV, would eventually make peace with the Mitannians.
[5] Henceforth, relations between Egypt and Naharin (Mitanni) were peaceful with much diplomatic gift giving according to the correspondence of the Amarna Letters.
The military annals of pharaoh Thutmose III refer to Naharin in explicit[clarification needed] terms.
In his 33rd Year, Thutmose III records: Inscriptions on two faces of the obelisk in Istanbul, originally erected at 15 century B.C.
in the temple in Karnak, also mentions Thutmose III expanding Egypt's borders to and campaigning near Naharin (Mitanni).