Greek leader to face scepticism, criticism on first Berlin visit
 By Stephen Brown 8 hours ago                                                   
     By Stephen Brown BERLIN (Reuters) - Angela Merkel and Alexis Tsipras have 
sought to play down the drama of the Greek leader's first official visit to 
Berlin on Monday, but open scepticism among the Chancellor's allies has spawned 
media portrayals of a western-style showdown. Unsurprisingly perhaps, German 
media have cast Greece's leftist prime minister as the outlaw and the 
conservative German Chancellor as a sheriff fighting to keep the euro zone 
together.  "When the Greek outlaw Alexis Tsipras meets Angela Merkel - seen as 
all-powerful in many countries - all of Europe will be watching spellbound," 
wrote Welt am Sonntag. The Frankfurter Allgemeine reminded Tsipras that the EU 
"is not the Wild West". Sticking to the Wild West imagery, a cartoon in 
Greece's To Vima newspaper depicted a sweating Tsipras in dungarees pumping an 
old-fashioned railway handcar uphill while Merkel timed him.  Both leaders 
would be aghast at this confrontation scenario. Although Merkel acknowledged 
last week that she and Tsipras would talk "and perhaps also argue", she said it 
would not be a defining moment in the standoff between Athens and its euro zone 
creditors over the terms of its 240 billion euro bailout deals. Tsipras told 
Greek newspaper Kathimerini that he saw their talks, which will include a joint 
news conference at 6.15 p.m. (1.15 p.m. EDT) on Monday, as "a meeting that will 
not be 'under pressure' from negotiations".Some hope. At last week's EU summit, 
Greece promised to meet creditors' demands to present an economic reform 
package within days to unlock the cash it needs to avoid crashing out of the 
euro - a dire prospect for Germany, the currency zone's largest economy. View 
gallery  Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras looks on at his office in Athens 
March 17, 2015. REUTERS/Alkis  …Despite Merkel's assurances that she did not 
expect Tsipras to bring these commitments in his briefcase to Berlin, her own 
coalition upped the ante by demanding precisely that. German politicians are 
openly skeptical about Greece's new leaders, none more so than 72-year-old 
Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble who has clashed repeatedly with his unruly 
53-year-old Greek peer Yanis Varoufakis. Schaeuble says Athens has "totally 
destroyed the trust of its European partners". "It would be good if Tsipras can 
convince the Chancellor on Monday that he grasps the seriousness of the 
situation," said Markus Soeder, Bavaria's conservative state finance minister. 
"So far, Greece has promised but not delivered." BRING THE LIST "I expect 
(Tsipras) to present this list in his talks with the Chancellor on Monday," 
said Thomas Oppermann, parliamentary leader of Merkel's Social Democrat 
coalition partners. "I want to know once and for all if Greece is ready to 
reform or not." But Economy Minister Sigmar Gabriel, who leads the SPD, was not 
sure Tsipras could meet that deadline: "He must do it but I don't know if he 
will able to tomorrow already." He told German TV he hoped the visit would 
"relaunch" bilateral relations. With Berlin braced for Greece coming back for 
yet more aid in a matter of months, Merkel's supporters look unlikely to okay a 
third bailout without real evidence of progress on reforms. "Nothing will 
happen if the Greek government is not crystal-clear in its willingness to 
reform," said Oppermann. The Greek government's revival of reparation claims 
from the Nazi occupation in World War Two has added to the Greco-German 
tensions. Germany is conscious of its historical responsibility but reluctant 
to link this to euro zone policy. "The two things are unrelated," said Gabriel. 
"The Fourth Reich" was the title of Der Spiegel magazine's main story this 
weekend, with a photo montage on its cover of Merkel on the Acropolis in Athens 
accompanied by Nazi officers.  Bild am Sonntag had moving interviews of 
survivors of the 1944 Nazi massacre of more than 200 people in the Greek 
village of Distomo - as well as a poll saying 71 percent of Germans were 
opposed to paying further World War Two reparations to Greece. But Greek 
Foreign Minister Nikos Kotzias, who met Germany's Frank-Walter Steinmeier on 
Sunday, looked likely to insist on reparations and repeated a warning - seen as 
a threat when he first made it earlier this month - that western Europe could 
be flooded with immigrants if Greece's situation decays further. "What I say 
is, if you break us, what will happen?" he told Sueddeutsche Zeitung in an 
interview to be published on Monday. "If millions of people move, nobody knows 
what will happen." (Additional reporting by Karolina Tagaris in Athens; Writing 
by Stephen Brown; Editing by Ralph Boulton and Stephen Powell)

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"SERBIAN NEWS NETWORK" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To post to this group, send email to [email protected].
Visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/senet.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to