The astute Telegraph financial columnist, Ambrose Evans-Pritchard, who has 
closely followed the unfolding crisis in Greece, says the Syriza leadership 
never expected to win the referendum and is trapped by its own success. It can 
no longer accede to the punishing demands for greater austerity by the 
German-led eurozone and the IMF nor does it want to leave the currency union, 
an impossible contradiction which has revealed itself in the hesitant and 
confusing political direction of the Tsipras government in its first five 
months in office. 

“Mr Tsipras had already made the decision to acquiesce to austerity demands, 
recognizing that Syriza had failed to bring about a debtors’ cartel of southern 
EMU states and had seriously misjudged the mood across the eurozone”, E-P 
writes. A Yes vote which would have mandated that Syriza hand over or share 
power with a new government to the right prepared to promptly surrender to the 
creditors’ demands. 

Now Syriza’s leadership must bear the full responsibility of capitulating 
against the will of the Greek masses who defiantly rejected that course on 
Sunday, or must effectively leave the eurozone, E-P reports that the 
government’s inner cabinet explored in detail and again retreated from the 
latter option last week prior to the unexpected referendum result. 

If the Syriza government is finally left with no choice but to reject the 
ever-escalating austerity demands of the eurozone powers, the only remaining 
question is whether it will be a chaotic process or one managed in concert with 
the eurozone powers. Despite the Telegraph columnist’s overwrought contention 
that that “Syriza has been in utter disarray for 36 hours…events are now 
spinning out of control…Greece is in turmoil, so is Europe”, Greece’s rupture 
with the eurozone is not a foregone conclusion. 

The US, Germany, and their more important allies are nervous and uncertain 
about the potential social, economic, and geopolitical consequences of a Greek 
exit. German banks and exporters, in particular, have benefited hugely from the 
creation of the eurozone, Greece is an important strategic asset for US and 
NATO military planners, and there are legal impediments to Greece’s formal 
expulsion from the eurozone. Not least, the inspiring Greek challenge to 
austerity may provide a powerful stimulus to similar mass movements in Spain, 
Italy, France, and the other European countries - a less reported concern of 
the eurozone governments. 

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/economics/11724924/Europe-is-blowing-itself-apart-over-Greece-and-nobody-can-stop-it.html
_______________________________________________
pen-l mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/pen-l

Reply via email to