Forum Post: Greek leftist leader Alexis Tsipras: 'It's a war between people and capitalism'
Posted 12 years ago on May 21, 2012, 7:07 p.m. EST by PeterKropotkin
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from Oakland, CA
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By Helena Smith
"I don't believe in heroes or saviours," says Alexis Tsipras, "but I do believe in fighting for rights … no one has the right to reduce a proud people to such a state of wretchedness and indignity."
The man who holds the fate of the euro in his hands – as the leader of the Greek party willing to tear up the country's €130bn (£100bn) bailout agreement – says Greece is on the frontline of a war that is engulfing Europe.
A long bombardment of "neo-liberal shock" – draconian tax rises and remorseless spending cuts – has left immense collateral damage. "We have never been in such a bad place," he says, sleeves rolled up, staring hard into the middle distance, from behind the desk that he shares in his small parliamentary office. "After two and a half years of catastrophe, Greeks are on their knees. The social state has collapsed, one in two youngsters is out of work, there are people leaving en masse, the climate psychologically is one of pessimism, depression, mass suicides."
But while exhausted and battle weary, the nation at the forefront of Europe's escalating debt crisis and teetering on the edge of bankruptcy is also hardened. And, increasingly, they are looking towards Tsipras to lead their fight.
"Defeat is the battle that isn't waged," says the young politician who almost overnight has seen his radical left coalition party, Syriza, jump from representing fewer than 5% of Greeks to enjoying ratings of more than 25% in polls.
"You ask me if I am afraid. I'd be afraid if we continued on this path, a path to social hell … when someone fights there is a big chance that he will win and we are fighting this to win."
Before Greeks went to the polls on 6 May, neither Tsipras nor his party were a name to be reckoned with. If anything both were the butt of vague mockery: a former pony-tailed student communist leading a rag-tag band of ex-Trotskyists, Maoists, champagne socialists and greens. Tsipras's assistants – wielding Louis Vuitton bags and fashionable sunglasses – readily admit they are signed up "militants" mostly of the anti-globalisation cause.
But today I am the third person to pass through Tsipras's second-floor parliamentary office. The others have been the German ambassador to Greece and the president of the European parliament, Martin Schulz. As Greeks prepare to head to the polls again on 17 June, Tsipras, the politician poised to win the greatest number of votes – after Syriza came in second place in this month's inconclusive election – is the man everyone wants to see. "He is not as dangerous as he appears on TV, but he does have some risky positions," says Schulz emerging form the talks.
"The [upcoming] vote in Greece will decide not just what happens here but what will happen internationally", adds the German before saying what he really wants to say. "If the memorandum [loan agreement] is cast in doubt, the payment [of rescue funds from the EU and IMF] to Greece is cast in doubt."
Tsipras, who turns 38 in July, wants me to know that the war is not personal. The enemy is not Berlin, until now the biggest provider of the monumental rescue funds keeping the debt-stricken economy afloat. "It is not between nations and peoples," he says. "On the one side there are workers and a majority of people and on the other are global capitalists, bankers, profiteers on stock exchanges, the big funds. It's a war between peoples and capitalism … and as in each war what happens on the frontline defines the battle. It will be decisive for the war elsewhere."
Greece, he says, has become a model for the rest of Europe because it was the first country to fall victim to the enforcement of hard-hitting "growth through austerity" policies pursued in the name of resolving the crisis.
"It was chosen as the experiment for the enforcement of neo-liberal shock [policies] and Greek people were the guinea pigs," he insists.
"If the experiment continues, it will be considered successful and the policies will be applied in other countries. That's why it is so important to stop the experiment. It will not just be a victory for Greece but for all of Europe."
Under the current rescue plan, which has subjected the nation to relentless austerity – the average Greek's purchasing power has dropped by 35% – the international financial system, and especially banks, are gaining most, he says. "Who is surviving, tell me?" he asks. "Greeks aren't … The loans are going straight to interest payment and banks."
The other point that Tsipras wants to make is that he is not against the euro or monetary union. Fears that the country is about to exit the eurozone are about terrorising people to keep the status quo, he claims. They are why the nation has seen "more then €75bn" of cash taken out of Greek banks since the outbreak of the crisis in Athens in December 2009.
But Angela Merkel, the German chancellor, should know she has "a huge historical responsibility" – a point he will be making when he holds talks with representatives of the German government in Berlin next week.
"We are not against a unified Europe or monetary union," he insists. "We don't want to blackmail, we want to persuade our European partners that the way that has been chosen to confront Greece is totally counter-productive. It is like throwing money at a bottomless pit."
Over the past two years, Athens had received two bumper bailouts from the EU and IMF: €110bn in May 2010 and then €130bn in March this year, but the stringent fiscal adjustment programmes demanded in return for the aid are clearly not working, he says.
If the emphasis is not now put on re-energising Europe's most moribund economy through development and growth, "in six months we will be forced to discuss a third package and after that a fourth," he predicts,
"European tax payers should know that if they are giving money to Greece, it should have an effect … it should go towards investments and underwriting growth so that the Greek debt problem can be confronted because with this recipe we are not confronting the debt problem, the real issue."
All this sounds remarkably toned down from the fiery rhetoric Tsipras has come to be associated with – until, that is, the mention of rescue funds drying up if (as seems likely) his party emerges as the governing force in a hung parliament.
The first thing Syriza will do in power is tear up the controversial "memorandum of understanding" Greece signed up to with creditors, which details the onerous conditions under which the country receives quarterly injections of cash.
The agreement, he says, was reached without the Greek people ever being consulted. And now in the wake of the 6 May vote, when more than 70% of those opposing the policies voted for "anti-bailout" parties, it is clear it has lost all legitimacy, he insists
It is a high stakes game but, he argues, Europe is holding the gun because ultimately, under European law, Greece can't be ejected from the 17-nation bloc.
"Europeans have to understand that we don't have any intention of pushing ahead with a unilateral move. We will [only] be forced to act if they act unilaterally and make the first move," he says. "If they don't pay us, if they stop the financing [of loans] then we will not be able to pay creditors. What I am saying is very simple."
And if Athens stops paying its creditors, the problem then takes on a different hue. Greece is in a much stronger position than most think.
"Keynes said it many years ago. It's not just the person who borrows but the person who lends who can find himself in a difficult position. If you owe £5,000 to the bank, it's your problem but if you owe £500,000, it's the bank's problem," he said. "This is a common problem. It's our problem. Its Merkel's problem. It's a European problem. Its a world problem."
With his good looks, raven black hair and propensity for rousing oratory, Tsipras comes across more as a pin-up (which is how many in Greece see him) than a saviour, which is how a great deal of others see him.
His aides add in passing that one of his heroes is Venezuelan leader Hugo Chávez, with whom he shares the same birthday. Nor does he believe in political tags "at this time of crisis".
But though he appears to be preparing for power and moderating his tone, he says the war will continue.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2012/may/18/greek-leftist-leader-alexis-tsipras
It is impossible to list all of the things Greece and the Greeks have done wrong and which entities did what. The good thing is that they are not a good example of anything except a country that has squandered it's legacy. Don't expect me to comment further. It is a waste of time.
Does this mean Greece will stop spending more money than they take in?
and stop paying their creditors
Great article. Thanks.
I thought the use of the word war for meaning
opposition instead of violence was an American phenomenon
is this translation accurate ?
It's a war between leftists and the reality that eventually you run out of borrowed money.
Tell it WallStreet, and the medical insurance corporations.
Wall Street got a free $1,000,000,000,000.
I rather see it go the welfare queens, at least they spend it here.
What did in Greece was its inability to issue its own currency under the EU and having a great deal of foreign debt that was payable in foreign currency.
But it appears you see just class warfare instead of simple economics.
all debt is class warfare
Agreed!
Sure, issue their own currency, that'll turn the borrowed money bubble machine back on. LOL. But why would anyone hold that currency that they simply create on a whim? Why would anyone outside Greece accept it as payment for imports? Reality is finally shutting down the leftists. Simple economics is now what's all around them.
Its not 'borrowed' money. You don't have to issue bonds to issue currency, monetizing debt the way we do is pretty stupid. Tell me, why does any currency get accepted? Think the Euro is any more secure or the dollar? Yet the dollar is still the worlds reserve currency, and will be for the foreseeable future. Gold based currency is a fiat system as well as there is no intrinsic value in gold.
Greece under their current ties to the EU has to have a balanced budget, as any household, county, or state government here in the US. Until their currency comes under their own control, economically they are tied to the constraints of the EU. The very first thing they have to do is take care of their foreign debt.
Greece also fell prey to derivatives. Billions of dollars where being bet through derivatives on the failure of their government. That kind of pressure makes it an almost self fulfilling prophecy.
Make your own decisons about what currency you want to hold. But if Greece thinks just printing money ends its problems with debt, you're wrong. Any getting their currency would do their best to get rid of it.
Billions being bet on failure, sure. Politicians don't like anyone spoiling the party. They say bad things about rating agencies too. They love buyers of their securities because they get it, but sellers are bad, corrupt, and don't get it. Right.
Greece deserves what's coming. The population believed government was free and the unions thought everyone could work for government and retiree at 50. Here it comes. It'll be fun to watch.
right, Greece can't be controlled by the outside banks money
No, they can't even control themselves. Meanie banks; they don't like lending after it becomes obvious you're a deadbeat. You should learn a little something about global finance. Even retirees via their mutual funds and retirement plans are spur es of capital. They too have cut off Greece.
no one should deal with these banks
Maybe you can buy some of their bonds. Open a brokerage account and have at it. LOL. But you won't for the same reason other investors won't. It's a bad investment. Smarten up.
You're too ignorant to know this, but banks and the ECB are all that's been holding up the PIIG countries. Private investors have long ago walked away.
Portugal, Italy, Greece and Spain.
You missed Ireland. Go ahead, buy some greek bonds. Fill in with YOUR money what you think the meanie banks won't fund. LOL Maybe other owstards will dothe same. And then you can keep lending money to fund Greece's unions and welfare state. Great idea, huh? No? Why not?
because the money does not come back down from the top
So you know lending to Greece is nuts, but it's a really good idea for a bank. Sure, makes a lot of sense.
interesting