The
Greek Crisis - What You're Not Being Told
Tsipras
Closing Speech at the EU Parliament Strasbourg
Grevolt?
Voices supporting Athens grow in European Parliament
7
July, 2015,
The
knives are out for Greece and its Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras, as
Greece desperately tries to cut a deal with the Eurozone, to keep its
economy afloat. However, as deadline day looms, Athens has a growing
number of supporters in Europe.
The
country’s banks are closed and the population is still limited to
withdrawing just 60 euros a day. Tispras has been pleading with the
European Parliament for a fairer deal to try and keep the country in
the Eurozone and understands the needs to implement reforms.
"We
are determined not to have a clash with Europe but to tackle head on
the establishment in our own country and to change the mindset which
will take us and the euro zone down," he
said on Wednesday, Reuters reported.
However,
the Greek Prime Minister’s words of conciliation do not seem to
have struck a chord with some other European politicians.
Guy Verhofstadt, President of the
Group of the Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe (ALDE)
addresses the European Parliament during a debate on Greece in
Strasbourg, France, July 8, 2015. (Reuters / Vincent Kessler)
German
MEP, Manfred Weber was scathing in his criticism towards Tsipras,
accusing the Greek Prime Minister of “destroying
confidence in Europe” and
that the “he
should apologize for those utterly unacceptable statements that
unfortunately he has passed over them in silence.” Weber
made it quite clear, that in his opinion, Tsipras and the Greek
government were responsible for the current crisis.
His
viewpoint was shared by Guy Verhofstadt of Belgium, who launched a
no-holds barred condemnation towards the Greek government.
“You
are talking about reforms, but we are never seeing concrete proposals
and I am angry because we are practically walking towards a Grexit.
We are not sleepwalking, we are running towards a Greek
exit,” Verhofstadt,
who is the leader of the liberal group in the European Parliament,
said.
Harsh
words, and certainly strong words, but Tsipras was hardly without
support from varying political spectrums within the European Union
against the perceived “Brussels
bullies” as
Nigel Farage mentioned.
The British anti-EU politician chastised the German politician Weber for
his attack on Tsipras, calling it “disgusting” while
he also praised the Greek people for having the courage to vote ‘No’
in a recent referendum on whether to accept the terms proposed by the
Eurozone credдtors.
“If you have got the courage you should lead the Greek people out of the Eurozone with your head held high,” Farage said. “Yes it will be tough for the first few months, but with a devalued currency and friends all over the world you will recover.”
A
number of Greece’s supporters within the Eurozone were thankful for
the Athens and Tsipras speaking out against Europe.
Posters with the word "No"
(Oxi) and a Greek flag are seen on the desks of Members of the
European Parliament during a debate on Greece at the European
Parliament in Strasbourg, France, July 8, 2015. (Reuters / Vincent
Kessler)
“I
am frightened by this Europe, which continues sanctions against
Russia and with all these armed forces around as well. There are
people in here who are saying it is not Islamic terrorism that is the
problem, but the right, the populists – like Orban, Le Pen,
Cameron,” said
the Matteo Salvini, the leader of the Italian party, Lega Nord.
Meanwhile,
Marine Le Pen, never one to miss an opportunity to have a dig at the
EU or the Eurozone, laid the blame solely on the banks for causing
this crisis.
“I
think this is the first time in history that a central bank has
completely off its own back launched a completely artificial
crisis,” she
said, adding that the Greek people should be commended for the
hardships they have had to put up with over the last five years.
“All
other people in Europe should be looking at what is happening with
Greece and maybe an exit from the euro would allow for durable
growth. Others are afraid that Greece will show by leaving the euro,
one can survive better out of it than actually being part of it,” she
concluded.
Greece
and others now find themselves in the wrong currency. There is a new
Berlin Wall and it's called the Euro.
— Nigel Farage (@Nigel_Farage) July 8, 2015
Spanish
socialist Pablo Iglesias said that the EU was not being destroyed
because of the fact that people do not agree with adjustment
procedures being put forward by the IMF and ECB, in regards to the
Greek ‘No’ vote in Sunday’s referendum. Rather, he accused
Berlin of “financial
terrorism.”
“What
is damaging Europe is financial totalitarianism, like the arrogance
of the German government and the incapacity of certain people in
government to defend their people,” Iglesias
mentioned.
Perhaps
the voice of reason as the debate drew to a close, was left to the
president of the European Council, Donald Tusk, who said, “this
is really and truly the final wake-up call,” and
that “we
could “be waking up in a very different Europe in four days’
time.”
In
a poignant message to Greek’s creditors, Tusk said, “if
you want to help your friend in need, don’t humiliate him.”
The German nazi speaks
The
German Siege Of Greece Begins (No, This Is Not A Repeat From 1941)
Michael
Snyder
6
July, 2015
Did
you notice that Greece’s creditors are not rushing to offer the
Greeks a new deal in the wake of the
stunning referendum result on
Sunday? In fact, it is being reported that the initial reaction
to the “no” vote from top European politicians was “a
thunderous silence“.
Needless to say, the European elite were not pleased by how the Greek
people voted, but they still have all of the leverage. In
particular, it is the Germans that are holding all of the cards.
If the Germans want to cave in and give the Greeks the kind of deal
that they desire, everyone else would follow suit. And if the
Germans want to maintain a hard line with Greece, they can block any
deal from happening all by themselves. So in the final
analysis, this is really an economic test of wills between Germany
and Greece, and time is on Germany’s side. Germany doesn’t
have to offer anything new. The Germans can just sit back and
wait for the Greek government to default on their debts, for Greek
banks to totally run out of cash and for civil unrest to erupt in
Greek cities as the economy grinds to a standstill.
In
ancient times, if a conquering army came up against a walled city
that was quite formidable, often a decision would be made to conduct
a siege. Instead of attacking a heavily defended city directly
and taking heavy casualties, it was often much more cost effective to
simply surround the city from a safe distance and starve the
inhabitants into submission.
In
a sense, that is exactly what the Germans appear to want to do to the
Greeks. Without more cash, the Greek government cannot pay
their bills. Without more cash, Greek banks are going to start
collapsing left and right. Without more cash, the Greek economy
is going to completely and utterly collapse.
So
yes, the Greeks voted for change, but the Germans still hold the
purse strings.
And
right now the Germans do not sound like they are in any mood to
compromise. The following comes from a Reuters
report that
was published on Monday…
German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s deputy said Athens had wrecked any hope of compromise with its euro zone partners by overwhelmingly rejecting further austerity.
Merkel and French President Francois Hollande conferred by telephone and will meet in Paris on Monday afternoon to seek a joint response. Responding to their call, European Council President Donald Tusk announced that euro zone leaders would meet in Brussels on Tuesday evening (1600 GMT).
German Vice-Chancellor Sigmar Gabriel, leader of Merkel’s centre-left Social Democratic junior coalition partner, said it was hard to conceive of fresh negotiations on lending more billions to Athens after Greeks voted against more austerity.
Leftist Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras had “torn down the last bridges on which Greece and Europe could have moved towards a compromise,” Gabriel told the Tagesspiegel daily.
In
addition, Angela Merkel’s office released a statement on Monday
that placed the onus on making a new proposal to end this crisis on
the Greek government…
“It is up to Greece to make something of this. We are waiting to see which proposals the Greek government makes to its European partners,” the office of German Chancellor Angela Merkel, Europe’s leading austerity advocate, said in a statement.
Just
because the Greek people want the Germans to give them a very
favorable deal does not mean that the Germans will be inclined to do
so. The Germans know that whatever they do with the Greeks will
set a precedent for the rest of the financially-troubled nations all
across Europe. If Greece gets a free lunch, then Italy, Spain,
Portugal, Ireland and France will
expect the same kind of treatment…
Angelos Chryssogelos, an expert on Greek politics at the London-based think tank Chatham House, said the strength of Sunday’s mandate handed to Tsipras means it will be almost impossible for the prime minister’s leftist Syriza party to make a deal with European creditors.
“The Europeans made it pretty clear where they stand, and they have been consistent,” Chryssogelos said, adding that the creditors also are unlikely to back down. “Right now, voters across the eurozone largely support the tough stance taken by the eurozone.”
Chryssogelos said Greek voters may have underestimated the resolve of the creditors to reach an accord on their terms. “If someone is seen getting preferential treatment, then someone else will want that treatment,” he said, referring to other eurozone debtors such as Ireland and Portugal.
And
remember, there is a very important Spanish election coming up in
December.
If
Syriza comes out as the big winner in this crisis, it will empower
similar movements in Spain and all over the rest of the continent.
So
look for Greece’s creditors to tighten the screws over the coming
days. In fact, we already saw a bit of screw tightening on
Monday when the ECB announced that Greek banks would
not be receiving additional emergency assistance…
In a move sure to increase pressure on Greece’s flailing banks, the European Central Bank on Monday decided not to expand an emergency assistance program, raising fears that Greece could soon go completely bankrupt.
The move put a swift crimp on Greek leaders’ jubilation after winning a landslide endorsement from their citizens to reject Europe’s austerity demands and seek a new bailout bargain. Now they must seek a bargain before the money runs out within days, which would likely force them off the euro.
Basically
we are watching a very high stakes game of chicken play out.
And as the cash dwindles, economic activity in Greece is slowly
grinding to a halt. The following comes from the
Washington Post…
The dwindling cash is sucking the life out of everything from coffee shops to taxis, as anxious Greeks economize amid fears for the future. Greek leaders also banned transfers of money abroad, meaning that very little can now be imported into the country.
Printing plants are warning that they may run out of paper to print newspapers by the end of the week. Butchers say that stocks of imported meat are dwindling.
Some
are even projecting that we could see civil unrest erupt in Greece in
about “48 hours” once the ATM machines run
out of cash…
Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras probably has 48 hours to resolve a standoff with creditors before civil unrest breaks out and ATMs run out of cash, hedge fund Balyasny Asset Management said.
Yes,
the Greek people exhibited great resolve in voting against the
demands of the creditors on Sunday.
But
how long can they endure this economic siege?
It
is inevitable that a breaking point will come. Either the Greek
government will give in, or the Greeks will leave the euro and start
to transition back to the drachma.
If
we do see a “Grexit”, and many analysts believe that one is
coming, it could set off a chain of events that could cause immense
financial pain all over the planet.
There are tens of trillions
of dollars of derivatives that
are tied to European bond yields, European interest rates, etc.
The following is an excerpt from a piece authored by Phoenix
Capital Research that
explains what kind of jeopardy we could potentially be facing…
The global derivatives market is roughly $700 trillion in size.That’s over TEN TIMES the world’s GDP. And sovereign bonds… including even bonds from bankrupt countries such as Greece… are one of, if not the primary collateral underlying all of these trades.
Greece is not the real issue for Europe. The entire Greek debt market is about €345 billion in size. So we’re not talking about a massive amount of collateral… though the turmoil this country has caused in the last three years gives a sense of the importance of the issue.
Spain, by comparison has over €1.0 trillion in debt outstanding… and Italy has €2.6 trillion. These bonds are backstopping tens of trillions of Euros’ worth of derivatives trades. A haircut on them would trigger systemic failure in Europe.
If
Greece gets a “haircut” on their debt, other European nations
would want the same and that would cause massive chaos in the
derivatives markets.
But
if Greece does not get a deal and ends up leaving the eurozone, that
will cause bond yields to go crazy all over Europe and that would
also cause tremendous chaos in the derivatives markets.
So
much depends on keeping this system of legalized gambling that we
call “derivatives
trading”
stable. We have allowed the global derivatives bubble to become
many times larger than the GDP of the entire planet, and in the end
we will pay a great price for this foolishness.
Every
pyramid scheme eventually collapses, and this one will too.
But
the difference with this pyramid scheme is that it is going to take
the entire global financial system down with it.
Listen to this! It sounds more like propaganda from a totalitarian state than anything
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