Sums are wrong: Germany owes Greece, leftist says

ReutersBy Michael Stott | Reuters – Wed, Jun 20, 2012

ATHENS (Reuters) - Greece's new leaders may want to renegotiate the
country's 130 billion euro bailout package with Germany and other
lenders but a veteran icon of Greek resistance is pursuing a more
ambitious goal with Berlin.

Manolis Glezos, an 89-year-old leftist politicians famed for climbing
up to the Acropolis in May 1941 and tearing down the Nazi occupiers'
swastika flag, says Germany still owes Greece more in wartime
reparations than the entire cost of the bailout.

"We don't owe the Germans money, they owe us," he told Reuters in an
interview in his central Athens office, sitting in front of a line of
campaign posters for his radical Syriza bloc, which placed second in
last Sunday's Greek parliament election.

"The total they owe us is 162 billion euros without interest. If you
add 3 percent interest, it's more than a trillion euros. But we can
accept a haircut on the interest."

Glezos says Germany failed to pay compensation to Athens for the Nazi
occupation and looting of mainland Greece from 1941-44, or to repay a
forced loan extracted by the Third Reich.

Germany denies it still has outstanding debts for war-era reparations.
The long-dormant issue has resurfaced this year with increasing vigor
as the Athens government lurches closer to bankruptcy and Berlin
clamors for Greece to impose harsh spending cuts to balance its books.

Glezos's voice on the issue carries particular authority in Greece
because of his wartime act of defiance, which earned a death sentence
in absentia from the Nazi occupiers.

He remains a leading parliamentarian and topped the party list of
candidates for Syriza in Sunday's election. Much in demand, he says he
has given around 80 interviews to foreign media ranging from Japan to
Venezuela in the past week alone.

The figure he uses for money Germany owes is made up of war
reparations awarded to Greece at an international conference in Paris
in 1946 ($7 billion at the time, adjusted for inflation to 108 billion
euros in today's money) and the forced loan Greece made ($3.5 billion,
adjusted to 54 billion euros today).

In February, 28 Greek parliamentarians tabled a proposal requesting a
debate on war reparations owed by Germany. Then-foreign minister
Stavros Dimas said the issue remained open.

The German Foreign Ministry replied at the start of April that Berlin
acknowledged its responsibility for World War Two but had paid all
reparations owed to Greece.

Germany had not only "shouldered its historical responsibility for the
wrongs perpetrated by the Nazi regime" but had "additionally made
reparations that went beyond its legal obligations - also vis-à-vis
Italy and Greece," Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle said in a
statement.

Glezos, who was tear-gassed by riot police during a demonstration
against austerity measures last February, insists Germany has not paid
and says the issue has been given fresh force by Germany's demands for
Greek spending cuts.

"Does Mrs Merkel want revenge on the Greek people because they were
the first in Europe to reject the Third Reich?" he asks mischievously,
his eyes twinkling. "Does she want to take revenge on us because we
overturned all Hitler's plans?"

The language might sound extreme but it reflects a strong strand of
thinking on the Greek left. Stathis Stavropoulos, a leading newspaper
cartoonist here, has won international attention with drawings of
Germans as Nazi officials barking orders at hapless Greeks.

"Our dream of European Union was very different," Stavropoulos told
Reuters in an interview. "It was a union of countries and
peoples...not a Fourth German Reich".

Reinforcing that analogy, Glezos recalled how in 1943, Nazi propaganda
chief Josef Goebbels published an article in the weekly party
newspaper Das Reich entitled "The Year 2000".

"In this article, he predicted that in the year 2000, German culture
and civilization will be the most powerful in Europe. This estimate
was only 10 years out."

(Reporting and writing by Michael Stott; Editing by Peter Graff)
-- 
Jim Devine / "As far as the laws of mathematics refer to reality, they
are not certain; and as far as they are certain, they do not refer to
reality." -- Albert Einstein
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