[The German central bank, the Bundesbank, warned in its monthly report Wednesday that the Greek situation was “extremely worrying,” but that easing Greece ’s bailout terms “would damage confidence in all euro-area agreements and treaties and strongly weaken incentives for national reform and consolidation measures.”]
By Nicholas Kulus and Paul Geitner
At a summit meeting in Brussels on Wednesday, regional
leaders failed to signal any significant new steps to stimulate the sputtering
regional economy or resolve the competing agendas of President François Hollande of France, who favors stronger action
to spur growth, and his German counterpart, Chancellor Angela Merkel, who has
opposed aggressive moves to ease the pressure on Europe’s weakest economies.
Yet, the urgency for a solution to the region’s debt crisis,
now in its third year, may never have been greater.
With international economic monitors warning that the
Continent could slide back into recession, Spain has watched its borrowing costs climb to unsustainable
levels, as concerns rise about the country’s weakened banking sector. Fears
continue to grow that it will be difficult to avoid a messy divorce between Greece and the euro zone, with still unpredictable consequences
for markets and other struggling European economies, including Spain and Italy .
In a conference call held on Monday, finance ministry
officials from the euro zone countries were urged to make sure contingency
plans were in place for all eventualities, including a Greek exit, one European
official involved said.
“You have a debt crisis, a banking crisis and a political
crisis. Those are the three crises that are occurring simultaneously,” said
Thomas Cooley, economics professor at the New York University Stern School of
Business. “Anything that undermines confidence in the financial system is bad,
not just for the European financial system but the U.S. financial system as well.”
Problems in Europe pose a threat to President Obama’s re-election plans as
well, because a deeper slump there could drag down the United States economy, as happened a year ago. In a recent report, the
Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development cited Europe ’s
potential slump as the leading threat to global growth.
Some European leaders had tried to play down expectations
for Wednesday’s meeting, one they said was only a prelude to a formal meeting
scheduled for the end of June. “Each of us spoke and put forward our position,”
said Ms. Merkel, addressing the discussion of jointly issued debt, known as
euro bonds, after the meeting. “François Hollande spoke as he said he would. It
was a very differentiated discussion.”
But in an indication of developing fissures, Mr. Hollande,
who has been vocal in supporting euro bonds, said before the meeting that “the
euro zone must show that it can support Greece .” Rather than suggesting a decisive new approach or
finding common solutions, the leaders appear to be increasingly at odds.
In many ways their most important mission may be to quell
their own infighting. The demand from France and others for bonds jointly
issued by the 17 members of the euro currency union, to pool the borrowing
risk, has grown louder, even as the opposition in Germany has grown more
rancorous.
German officials said that Ms. Merkel, after arriving, met
briefly with Greece ’s caretaker prime minister, Panagiotis Pikrammenos. They
said Ms. Merkel had told him Germany would do what it could to help Greece , but added as she has many times before that Athens would have to abide by the agreements it made with its
lenders.
On June 17, Greece will hold a second round of elections that is being
treated as a referendum on the loan agreement, and the date is evolving into a
deadline for European leaders to offer some sort of hope to the Greek people.
But it is not clear what form that might take.
The German central bank, the Bundesbank, warned in its
monthly report Wednesday that the Greek situation was “extremely worrying,” but
that easing Greece ’s bailout terms “would damage confidence in all euro-area
agreements and treaties and strongly weaken incentives for national reform and
consolidation measures.”
Instead of euro bonds, less controversial measures, like
increased financing for the European Investment Bank, the repurposing of
existing European structural funds and even “project bonds” jointly issued for
specific undertakings, are likely to be pursued. Spain ’s prime minister, Mariano Rajoy, has called for more
aggressive action by the European Central Bank.
Mr. Hollande has promised to find a way to generate
economic growth not only in France but also for reeling economies like Greece . He has proposed that euro member nations pool their
resources to make project bonds available for initiatives intended to promote
growth. In the process, he has set himself as an opponent of Ms. Merkel and the
austerity policies associated with her stance for fiscal rectitude.
Although the German and French finance ministers praised
each other and spoke of their friendly and cooperative relations after their
preliminary meeting in Berlin on Monday, the level of frustration in the German capital
over Mr. Hollande’s vocal demand for euro bonds has become increasingly
evident.
Many economists believe that euro bonds offer the surest
way to end the sovereign debt
crisis and for European
states to restore growth. But in Berlin , many policy makers view them with skepticism, as a way
for other countries to tap the creditworthiness of Germany rather than facing up to difficult but necessary economic
reforms. “It is clear who wants what from whom,” said Thomas Steffen, a deputy
finance minister, in an address on fiscal policy on Wednesday. “A lot of people
want something from us.”
While talk has focused on how isolated Ms. Merkel has
become in her stance against euro bonds and in favor of pressing deficit cuts,
she is far from alone. Many Eastern European countries, which suffered through
their own austerity programs to gain entry to the euro zone and are still
poorer than Greece, have little sympathy for Athens. And the Austrians, Finns and
Dutch have thus far hewed to Ms. Merkel’s line.
“We did not expect a decision tonight,” Mr. Hollande said
after the meeting. “There was no conflict, no confrontation between the various
countries and some were even more against euro bonds than Ms. Merkel.”
Ms. Merkel said Wednesday that the German Constitution and
the European treaties forbade countries from assuming one another’s debts.
“Aside from that, I don’t believe that they would make any contribution to
boosting growth in the euro zone,” she said.
Mr. Cooley, of New York
University , said: “I don’t think we’ll get all the way to the
unraveling of the euro system. The way they are approaching solutions to it is
the one that’s going to cause the most possible pain and damage to the
countries on the periphery.”
@ The New York Times
PAKISTAN SAYS U.S. DRONE STRIKE KILLS SUSPECTED MILITANTS
[Earlier this week, Bilawal Bhutto Zardari, the chairman of the ruling Pakistan Peoples Party and the son of President Asif Ali Zardari and the slain former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto, demanded a halt in drone strikes during a speech in New York.]
By Salman Masood
Estimates varied on the number of fatalities in Thursday’s
strike. Seven to 10 people suspected of being militants were believed to have died,
government and locals said.
The drone strikes come at a time when diplomatic relations
between the United States and Pakistan have worsened over Pakistan’s refusal to
reopen NATO supply lines that were closed down last November. Pakistan has been demanding an American apology over an airstrike
that killed 24 Pakistani soldiers. In order to reopen the NATO supply lines, Pakistan ’s Parliament has also demanded an end to drone strikes,
and the government is seeking a much higher transit fee for each NATO container.
Thursday’s drone strike occurred in Hasso Khe in the Lar
Dewar area of North Waziristan, an area considered a redoubt of local and
foreign militants. Most of the militants killed in the strike were Uzbek
fighters who belonged to the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan, said local
residents who were reached by telephone.
A strike on Wednesday in the village
of Datta Khel Kalai , also in North
Waziristan , killed four suspected
militants, The Associated Press reported, citing Pakistani intelligence officials.
The American drone strikes are immensely unpopular in the
country and have caused increasing friction between the two countries. While
the United States views the remotely piloted aircraft as vital in the fight
against militants, the drones are seen as a breach of national sovereignty that
also cause civilian deaths.
Politicians across the Pakistani political spectrum have
been unanimous in their criticism of the drone strikes.
Earlier this week, Bilawal Bhutto Zardari, the chairman of
the ruling Pakistan Peoples Party and the son of President Asif Ali Zardari and
the slain former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto, demanded a halt in drone
strikes during a speech in New York.
“The continuing unilateral U.S. drone attacks on Pakistani
soil are a constant irritant to Pakistani public opinion — both as a clear
violation of our sovereignty and the toll of collateral damage to innocent
victims,” Mr. Zardari said, addressing a gathering of supporters. “I would like
the American public to consider what their reaction would have been if American
troops had been killed in such an attack on their border with Mexico .”
Political analysts here say that the anti-American public
sentiment and the view that drones have caused a high number of civilian
casualties forced the government to adopt a tough posture on the strikes, even
though some officials previously gave tacit support for the strategy.
Protests against the drones have been more visible in the
country’s urban areas though rarely seen in the tribal regions, where local
residents acknowledge the drones have forced the militants to flee deeper into
the mountains.
“It’s quite obvious that drones are giving the Americans
the kind of results they want against the militants,” said Nadeem Farooq
Paracha, a columnist for the English language daily Dawn. “Drone strikes fill
the gap that Pakistan ’s armed forces and government should be filling, but are
not.”
Mr. Paracha said that despite the public outcry, it is
obvious that drone strikes will continue. “In reaction, there will be lots of
the same old rhetoric, very little about the on-ground realities,” he said.