RTThu, 30 Jul 2015 15:28 UTC
© Ronen Zvulun / ReutersGreek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras
The deal with creditors was "not of our choice," Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras has said, adding that Greece faced the dilemma between a difficult compromise and disorderly default.Speaking to the Syriza committee in Athens Thursday, Tsipras tried to defend Greece's €86 billion bailout deal with the international creditors, saying that Grexit was not a choice.
It would have forced Athens into devaluation and going back to the IMF for support, he added."If someone believes another government could have brought back a better deal they should say so,"
Kathimerini newspaper quoted Tsipras as saying.
The PM added that Syriza's efforts had managed to stir up the EU.
"We created the first cracks in Europe's neoliberal hegemony. We have to give a definitive answer on whether a leftist government can exist in a liberal, conservative Europe," Tsipras said.
This month, Tsipras reached an agreement with the troika of creditors on a €86 billion 3-year financial aid deal. The offer demands further austerity including tax hikes and raising the retirement age.
Many members of Syriza, including former finance minister Yanis Varoufakis, openly consider Alexis Tsipras' policy
contradictory to the results of the July 5 referendum, in which 61 percent voted against austerity.
The lack of unanimity in the Greek parliament may put an end to the coalition and thus lead to new elections.The Greek parliament has already adopted two packages of changes, which allowed Athens to kick off negotiations with creditors on unlocking the bailout.
Greece intends to finish the talks by
August 20, when a €3.2 billion bond repayment to the ECB is due.
"There is a viewpoint the blackmail (by creditors) was not real, and there should not be an agreement. This view cannot wait until the extraordinary congress," Tsipras said, suggesting a ballot on the issue on Sunday.
Comment: The situation is complex and is continuing to unfold. However, one thing is very clear - Greece did expose the Troika as the petty, psychopathic tyrants that they are. The following video shines light on what could have been happening behind the scenes, as a small number of Greek officials scrambled to make a real break from this tyranny:
Greece 'Blackmailed'? Nah. I think it's far more likely that some critical Greek Politicos are what/who were "Blackmailed."
After all, 61% of voters [near or above the level generally considered a 'landslide"] said "No."
Politicial Blackmail of a Politician? Sure! But it's nigh impossible to 'blackmail' a COUNTRY honestly represented by its government; and that would be assuming that such a creature - an overall honest, representative government - has ever existed, (doubtful). Ultimately, even within a group are, as individuals , too self interested and divergent to be 'blackmailed' en masse.
Contrast that with the FACT that blackmail is 99.99% of the time a crime committed against individuals by using their own peccadilloes, predilections and depredatdations against them, and I'd bet we're simply witnessing a political faux pas/politico 'Freudian Slip" in the word's use in the first place.
So WHO would resort to such a thing? Easy. They - Pathological PTB, taking advantage of individuals' flaws; which are certainly higher than average in the group that see to it that the PTB's MSM calls them a country or group's "Elite" or "Leaders."
For What It's Worth.
R.C.