Merkel sets strict terms for Greek aid, Juncker flags EU cash
By Renee Maltezou and Alastair MacdonaldBRUSSELS  Fri Mar 20, 2015 3:42pm EDT 
   BRUSSELS (Reuters) - European Union leaders welcomed a pledge on Friday from 
Greece to meet creditors' demands for a broad package of economic reform 
proposals within days to unlock the cash Athens needs to avoid stumbling out of 
the euro zone.After overnight crisis talks on the sidelines of an EU summit in 
Brussels, new Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras and German Chancellor Angela 
Merkel, the bloc's main paymaster, offered somewhat divergent understandings of 
how much Athens must do and how quickly. But EU officials insisted there was a 
broad agreement to act now on an accord struck a month ago.Merkel said Greece, 
which faces a cash crunch within weeks, would receive fresh funds only once its 
creditors approve the comprehensive list of reforms Tsipras promised to present 
soon. But she signaled some flexibility on what reforms Tsipras would have to 
make -- crucially giving his leftist-led coalition the chance to offer 
alternative savings strategies that will help it persuade its voters it is 
breaking with what Tsipras calls the failed austerity policies of his defeated 
predecessor.And European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker offered 
Tsipras a sweetener by saying 2 billion euros from the European Union's modest 
collective budget were available to ease the humanitarian impact of five years 
of spending cuts.Tsipras said he would fully respect a deal struck with euro 
zone finance ministers on Feb. 20 that extended an EU bailout deal until June. 
But he insisted that a condition in that pact requiring Athens to pass a final 
review of its efforts to bring its debts under control before receiving funds 
did not apply.After two months of mounting frustration on both sides, marked by 
public squabbling, Tsipras held three hours of talks with the leaders of 
Germany, France and the main EU institutions to try to break an impasse that 
risks depriving Athens of the euros it needs to function fully within the 
currency area. A joint statement by the EU institutions spoke of a "spirit of 
mutual trust". But it remained uncertain Tsipras and Merkel were talking about 
the same reforms, and how far Greece would have to start implementing them 
before it receives any new cash.DIVERGENT TAKESThe risk of a continued 
standoff, exactly a month after Greece secured a last-gasp four-month extension 
of an EU/IMF bailout, was highlighted by comments from Merkel and Tsipras."The 
agreement of Feb. 20 is still valid in its entirety. Every paragraph of the 
agreement counts," Merkel told German journalists who questioned whether she 
was now offering cash for promises that many of her supporters have stopped 
believing in.Tsipras appeared to differ. "It is clear that Greece is not 
obliged to implement recessionary measures," he said. "Greece will submit its 
own structural reforms which it will implement."Merkel insisted only the 
completion of approved measures -- in a final review by creditor institutions 
-- would satisfy lenders including the Euro Group of euro zone finance 
ministers."The Greek government has the possibility of replacing individual 
reforms outstanding from Dec. 10 with other reforms, if these ... have the same 
effect. The institutions and then the Euro Group must decide whether they do 
have the same effect," she said, noting Ireland had made such changes with EU 
backing.Tsipras, however, insisted that while his government would fully 
respect a deal struck with the euro zone on Feb. 20 it would not have to 
complete a final bailout review process begun by the last government to secure 
more aid: "We all have the same reading of the Feb. 20 accord... There is no 
such thing as a fifth review," he told a news conference after the summit.EU 
officials, keen to play up the prospects the talks had raised of preventing 
"Grexit", or an inadvertent "Grexident" that pushed Greece out of the euro, 
said differences were merely ones of emphasis for audiences in their respective 
countries.Sources aware of how the three hours of talks overnight had gone said 
Tsipras, aged 40 and only two months into his first ever government job, had 
quickly appeared to accept that he was facing a united front from creditors and 
would have no choice but to meet their impatient demands for cost-cutting 
measures."He has seen ... that he cannot divide the Europeans," one senior EU 
official said. "He can only work with them, not play them off against each 
other. He has also seen that there is goodwill if he sticks to his word and 
actually delivers."Another EU official said Tsipras, who will visit Merkel in 
Berlin on Monday after weeks of increasingly rancorous relations between 
ministers in their two cabinets, had indicated he could offer a full package of 
reforms within a week or 10 days.Nonetheless, with some German leaders saying 
they might prefer Greece out of the euro zone, and Tsipras trying to satisfy a 
coalition of radicals unused to power, senior EU officials do not rule out a 
further collapse of the process.Crucial for the Greek leader, EU officials 
believe, is being able to present his package as a break with his conservative 
predecessor -- even if many of the measures are broadly similar.APPOINTMENT IN 
BERLINTsipras said he had no deadline for submitting the comprehensive list of 
reforms and insisted Greece faced no short-term liquidity problem, 
contradicting comments by EU officials that Athens could run out of money in 
mid-April.Asked whether Greek demands for reparations for the World War Two 
Nazi occupation would be on the agenda on Monday, Merkel said Berlin had 
addressed the issue in the past but she was keen to discuss bilateral German 
assistance programs for Greece.EU officials said that if Athens came up with a 
convincing plan, the Euro Group could meet as early as next week to release at 
least some funds. Merkel too said Greece could get some payment sooner if it 
fulfilled the requirements faster.Greece is pressing in particular to receive 
1.9 billion euros in profits that the European Central Bank made last year on 
its holdings of Greek government bonds.The Greek Finance Ministry said it would 
respond in a "constructive spirit" to a list of requirements on reforms being 
drawn up by a team of technical experts from the creditors -- a contrast to an 
atmosphere of mutual mistrust and hostility which marked encounters with EU 
officials in Athens this week.Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis, whose comments 
and behavior have offended many of Greece's partners, especially Germany, 
joined the call for immediate implementation of the Feb. 20 extension 
agreement."First, we should work towards ending the toxic ‘blame game’ and the 
moralizing finger-pointing which benefit only the enemies of Europe," he said 
in a blog post on Friday.The meeting involved Tsipras, Merkel, Juncker, summit 
chairman Donald Tusk, Euro Group chair Jeroen Dijsselbloem, ECB President Mario 
Draghi and French President Francois Hollande. In a statement, Juncker, Tusk 
and Dijsselbloem said: "The Greek authorities will have the ownership of the 
reforms and will present a full list of specific reforms in the next 
days."Following the talks, the main Greek stock index rose 3.2 percent. 
Two-year Greek government bond yields fell 89 basis points to 23.85 percent. 
Two-year yields have doubled in a month and had risen over 3 percentage points 
on Thursday. (Additional reporting by Philip Blenkinsop, Robert-Jan Bartunekk 
Jan Strupczewski, Paul Taylor, Tom Koerkemeier, Andreas Rinke, Elizabeth 
Pineau, Adrian Croft, Francesco Guarascio, Foo Yun Chee and Robin Emmott in 
Brussels, Michele Martin and Gernot Heller in Berlin and Costas Pitas and Deepa 
Babington in Athens; Writing by Alastair Macdonald and Paul Taylor; Editing by 
Paul Taylor and David Stamp)

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