Endgame
looms for Greek crisis as both sides take debt negotiations to the
brink
Premier
Alexis Tsipras will come to a fork in the road on Thursday, but
whether or not a deal is made, the future for his country is bleak
Helena Smith in
Athens
Saturday 13 June
2015 22.59 BST /
http://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/jun/13/endgame-looms-for-greece-crisis
Eleventh-hour talks
to avoid Greece defaulting on its debt and plunging the eurozone into
crisis intensified at the weekend with Greek officials flying to
Brussels only days before a meeting of Europe’s finance ministers
that many regard as a final deadline.
Almost five months
after he assumed power, the Greek prime minister, Alexis Tsipras, has
come to a fork in the road: either he accepts the painful terms of a
cash-for-reform deal that ensures Greece’s place in the single
currency or he decides to go it alone, faithful to the vision of his
anti-austerity Syriza party. Either way, the endgame is upon him.
Thursday’s meeting
of eurozone finance ministers is viewed as the last chance to clinch
a deal before Athens’s already extended bailout accord expires on
30 June. “It is in his hands,” Rena Dourou, governor of the
Attica district, said. “Tsipras, himself, is acutely aware of the
historic weight his decision will carry.”
The drama of
Greece’s battle to keep bankruptcy at bay has, with the ticking of
the clock, become ever darker in tone. What started out as
good-tempered brinkmanship has turned increasingly sour as
negotiations to release desperately needed bailout funds have
repeatedly hit a wall over Athens’s failure to produce persuasive
reforms.
“It is as if they
work in Excel and we work in Word,” said one insider. “There just
seems to be no meeting of minds.”
Last week the mood
became more febrile as it emerged that Eurocrats, for the first time,
had debated the possibility of cash-starved Athens defaulting. The
revelation came amid reports that Germany’s chancellor, Angela
Merkel, was resigned to letting Greece go.
Berlin is by far the
biggest contributor to the €240bn bailout propping up the
near-bankrupt state. Last week, the EU council president, Donald
Tusk, ratcheted up the pressure, warning: “There is no more time
for gambling. The day is coming, I am afraid, that someone says the
game is over.”
On Saturday Greek
finance minister Yanis Varoufakis hit back, telling Radio 4 that he
did not believe “any sensible European bureaucrat or politician”
would seriously contemplate the country’s euro exit. “The reason
why we are not signing up to what has been offered is because it is
yet another version of the failed proposals of the past,” he said.
The persistent
demand of foreign lenders for pension reform, given the scale of
austerity already undertaken in a country that has seen its economy
shrink by more than a quarter in the past five years, was not only
silly but plainly a deal-breaker, he said. “It is just the kind of
proposal that one puts forward if you don’t want an agreement,”
insisted the academic-turned-politician.
With both sides
seemingly determined to take negotiations to the brink, the
nerve-racking game of poker was raised a notch yesterday as Tsipras’s
closest aides resumed talks with technical teams in Brussels. The EU
and IMF say the ball is now in Greece’s court. Following his
rejection of their demands as “absurd” last week, the young
premier is hoping the officials will be able to bridge outstanding
differences on the basis of a new set of “counter proposals”.
Publicly, the
government says it is closer than it has ever been to a deal, but in
private EU sources say the Greek government’s proposed measures
still run too close to the “red lines” that Tsipras has refused
to cross in terms of pension cuts and labour deregulation.
In a statement
released by his office , the leader was quoted as saying that, if a
compromise agreement was viable, his government would support it, no
matter what. “But if what Europe wants is division and continuation
of subordination we will again … say the big no and we will give
battle for the dignity of the people and our national sovereignty,”
a newspaper quoted him as saying.
Tsipras’s robust
defence of what Greek people believe are their rights has played well
with a population both worn out and humiliated by crisis. Support for
him has never been higher.
Neither, ironically,
has support for Greece’s continued membership of the eurozone
itself. “Even if we achieve very little, we will know that we have
held our heads high,” said Vangelis Pavlatos, an actor, in what has
become a common refrain. But the prolonged talks and the uncertainty
they have engendered has also sounded the death knell for the real
economy and a banking system that has been depleted by worried
savers. Panic is on the rise; so, too, is the unmistakable sense that
whichever way they go – and an extension of the current programme
may well be the end result – pride will soon be replaced by
hardship.
“Everyone knows
that a new deal is going to mean more austerity,” said Takis
Leonidopoulos, among the hundreds of accountants who took to the
streets on Friday in protest over projected tax rises.
“But if there is
no deal we will likely see capital controls, our bank savings will be
up in the air, salaries could stop, it’ll be ordinary people who
will pay the price. What we are looking at is misery either way,”
he sighed. “The big question – and be sure to write this – is
how are the Greeks going to react?”
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