FT, June 9, 2015 6:28 pm
‘Paperology’ continues, but mood darkens in Greece talks
Peter Spiegel in Brussels

Eurozone finance ministers gave a green light to extend the European 
share of Greece's bailout by four months, but the International Monetary 
Fund (IMF) expressed doubt about the reforms pledged by Athens in return 
for continued loans. Fears had been rife that without a European bailout 
extension, Greece would run out of money and be forced to leave the 
eurozone. But even with the extra time, Athens must still meet reform 
targets in the coming months to keep receiving funds from its European 
creditors and the IMF.

The back-and-forth was the latest document exchange between Athens and 
Brussels as Greece tries to break a months-long impasse and gain access 
to desperately needed bailout cash. The process has become numbingly 
familiar in recent weeks — so much so that the European Commission has 
even given it a name: “paperology”.

But the most recent exchange differed in one vital respect: the mood of 
cautious optimism that has surrounded the talks in recent weeks is 
rapidly giving way to fear and suspicion. Gone this time were the 
private reassurances that a deal would ultimately be concluded, allowing 
the Greek government to receive an infusion of euros before its bailout 
expires at the end of the month.

Instead, officials from various institutions involved in the talks now 
worry that Greece’s hard-left government is dangerously miscalculating. 
Athens, they believe, is intentionally prolonging the negotiations to 
the last minute in a belief that its creditors will eventually “blink” 
and agree to grant wholesale debt relief and new bailout cash with few 
strings attached.

“They do not want a deal with us; they just want debt relief,” a senior 
official with one of Athens’ bailout monitors said after reviewing 
Greece’s latest offer.

“I don’t think they will move. I think they’re waiting for us to blink, 
and we won’t,” the official added. “They don’t understand we’re not back 
in 2012 where the Europeans were willing to just throw money at the 
problem.”

The darkening mood was evident at the European Commission, which has 
long been viewed as Athens’ best ally in the stand-off. According to 
officials briefed on Tuesday’s meeting of 29 commissioners in 
Strasbourg, Jean-Claude Juncker lit into the Greek government, saying 
Athens had “lost the European Commission”.

“They failed to see the best friend of the small and medium-sized member 
states is the European Commission,” said one official, recounting the EU 
president’s remarks to his fellow commissioners.
In depth

Greek officials insist that is not the case. One senior official said 
the proposal they submitted on Monday night had halved the difference 
between the budget surplus targets laid out by creditors in a proposal 
last week, and a counterproposal made by Athens. “The creditors should 
do the same,” the Greek official said.

But creditor officials who have seen the document said that while there 
was a narrowing of the gap on the surplus targets, there was no 
discussion of how Athens intended to make up the difference — 
particularly in the disputed areas of raising value added tax on energy 
or on pension cuts.

Instead, Athens submitted a second paper on debt relief. Creditors have 
repeatedly insisted the matter was off the table until an agreement on 
economic reforms that Greece would adopt to release the remaining €7.2bn 
in the bailout programme.

In one sign of the pessimism surrounding the negotiations, several 
officials suggested that a meeting due to be held on Wednesday between 
Alexis Tsipras, the Greek prime minister, and his German and French 
counterparts — all of whom are scheduled to be in Brussels for a 
gathering of EU and Latin American leaders — might not take place.
Mr Juncker told the commission he would not attend if Mr Tsipras “came 
with the same kind of attitude as he had last week”, officials said, and 
Jeroen Dijsselbloem, the Dutch finance minister who heads Greek 
negotiations on behalf of his fellow eurozone finance ministers, also 
suggested the meeting might be scrapped.

Greek officials insisted they, too, did not want Mr Tsipras to 
participate in a meeting unless there were signs creditors were 
compromising.

“My take is that [the Greeks] are marking time until the drop dead 
moment has arrived, and then [they believe] we should blink,” said 
another senior eurozone official involved in the talks. “I am worried 
that they have still not understood [when] the real drop dead moment is.”
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