[D66] Europe on the brink as Greece staggers towards default
Antid Oto
protocosmos66 at gmail.com
Thu Nov 3 09:29:08 CET 2011
Europe on the brink as Greece staggers towards default
By Chris Marsden
3 November 2011
The G20 summit beginning today has been thrown into desperate crisis over the
increasingly likely failure of Greece to meet the terms of the latest tranche of
loans from the European Union, International Monetary Fund and European Central
Bank.
Tuesday saw massive losses on global stock markets, after Prime Minister George
Papandreou’s surprise decision to call a referendum on the eurozone rescue plan
agreed last week. Yesterday’s limited recovery did little to assuage growing
concerns of a possible Greek default spreading contagion to Italy and throughout
Europe.
World leaders fear a “no” vote would force Greece into an exit from the euro.
The universal response was threats and blackmail.
German Finance Minister Martin Kotthau threatened that it was still an open
question whether the next €8 billion of emergency aid for Greece could be paid
out before a referendum was held. “The tranche has not yet been paid. That is
the situation today. How things proceed is yet to be seen,” he said.
France’s European Affairs Minister Jean Leonetti said there was no question of
the euro zone renegotiating Greece’s bailout package. “The decisions that were
made [last week] cannot be renegotiated,” he said. “The referendum raises a
fundamental question: do you or do you not want to remain in the eurozone.
Because if you do not accept the accord, then that means not staying.”
European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso called for “national and
political unity in Greece” in support of the bailout measures, threatening:
“Without agreement of Greece to the programme supported by the EU and IMF,
conditions for Greek citizens will become much more painful, particularly for
the most vulnerable.”
US President Barack Obama’s spokesman, Jay Carney, warned that Europe needed “to
implement the very important decisions they made last week to provide a
conclusive resolution to it.”
China, which Europe has been courting as a potential source of investment,
called on EU leaders to persuade Greece to “drop the referendum idea.”
“Another of our meetings has been hijacked by Greece because of Papandreou’s
move to call a referendum,” a senior G20 official said.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Nicolas Sarkozy summonsed
Papandreou for a private grilling, before he meets similar treatment by the
entire G20. The talks were also attended by Christine Lagarde, managing director
of the IMF.
The Greek loan package was bound up with broader measures supposed to restore
confidence in the euro zone economies, centred on strengthening the European
Financial Stability Facility (EFSF), to a nominal package of one trillion euros
in guarantees for bailout loans.
That plan already appears to be unravelling. Yesterday the EFSF was expected to
issue 10-year bonds to fund Ireland’s bailout, but the deal was halted due to a
lack of buyers.
One investor told the Financial Times: “This is a fund that is supposed to have
the fire-power of €1 trillion, yet it can’t even raise €3 billion. That is very
worrying.”
The European Central Bank was forced to intervene and buy an estimated €1
billion to €2 billion of Italian bonds by mid-day in London. Italy last night
also held an emergency cabinet meeting to discuss the budget cuts being demanded
of it in the face of hundreds of billions of euros in debts. It is being charged
an unsustainable interest rate of over six percent on borrowing—the highest rate
since joining the euro.
Papandreou’s government could fall. He is under pressure to call his referendum
by December 11 at the latest, and he would likely lose. “Original thoughts that
the vote will be held in January are out of the question,” an IMF official said.
With the €8 billion withheld until after this date, the government would be
unable to even pay its wages bill.
Through his brinksmanship, Papandreou hopes to perform a political sleight of
hand. There is still a great deal of unclarity, but several sources state that
the referendum will be posed as whether or not to support Greece’s membership of
the EU and the euro zone, not the bailout. Papandreou said yesterday it would
provide “a clear mandate and a clear message in and outside Greece on our
European course and participation in the euro.”
Even if the bailout is made the subject of the referendum, Papandreou seems
intent on calling the bluff of the opposition parties and the trade union
bureaucracy, forcing them to line up behind his plans. He knows that behind
their pose of opposition to the austerity measures, the reality is that all the
major parties in Greece are united in their determination to make workers pay
for the economic crisis.
But his move hardly comes with a guarantee of success. On Friday, Papandreou
faces a confidence vote in Greece’s parliament that he could easily lose.
PASOK’s majority is down to two, after one MP quit. Another six MPs are calling
for him to resign.
There are already moves by the opposition parties, led by New Democracy and
PASOK dissidents, in support of early elections, which now seem more probable
than Papandreou’s referendum being held.
With no party enjoying popular support, the likely outcome would be a government
of national unity. This could easily encompass the fake left groups,
particularly Syriza, and might stretch to the Greek Communist Party (KKE).
However, whether or not Papandreou’s desperate gamble succeeds and he holds on
to power a little longer, or some new combination led by New Democracy comes to
office, the result will be the same for the Greek working class: a further
descent into social misery. An escalation of the class struggle is inevitable.
The measures agreed with the “troika” are massively unpopular and have been met
with mass protests and repeated general strikes. They involve devastating
attacks that include lowering the income tax threshold from €12,000 to €5,000,
raising value-added tax from 19 to 23 percent and the retirement age from 61 to
65, slashing pensions by between 20 and 40 percent, wage cuts of 30 percent and
further job losses.
It is in this light that the extraordinary decision Tuesday by Papandreou and
Defence Minister Panos Beglitis to sack the heads of the armed forces must be
judged. The decision was taken at an extraordinary meeting of the Council of
Foreign Affairs to replace New Democracy appointees to the heads of the army,
navy, air force and the general staff.
General Ioannis Giagkos, chief of the Greek National Defence General Staff, is
replaced by Lieutenant General Michalis Kostarakos. Lieutenant General Fragkos
Fragkoulis, chief of the Greek Army General Staff, is replaced by Lieutenant
General Konstantinos Zazias. Lieutenant General Vasilios Klokozas, chief of the
Greek Air Force, is to be replaced by Air Marshal Antonis Tsantirakis, and
Vice-Admiral Dimitrios Elefsiniotis, chief of the Greek Navy General Staff, by
Rear-Admiral Kosmas Christidis.
Initial efforts to dismiss the move as routine quickly gave way to questions
over whether Papandreou was attempting to forestall a coup. The Daily Mail was
the most forthright major publication to speculate that the government “was
trying to head off a coup d’état.” In May a CIA report concluded that a coup was
possible in Greece, if the government lost control.
Moreover, if Papandreou’s aim is to ensure the loyalty of the armed forces, then
he can use them against the Greek working class to just as deadly effect as his
political opponents.
Open discussion on military repression and even the imposition of military rule
by the ruling class is a warning to workers throughout Europe. As was shown with
the rounds of social cuts imposed internationally after the outbreak of the
global economic crisis, the principle governing the actions of the ruling class
is: where Greece goes today, Italy, Spain, Portugal and the rest of Europe
follow tomorrow.
http://wsws.org/articles/2011/nov2011/gree-n03.shtml
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