18 FEB 2,
2015 10:52 AM EST
By Leonid Bershidsky
It's widely
assumed that the European Union will cave to Greek demands to write off some of
Greece 's
debt. What, however, if it doesn't? A Greek exit from the euro and even the
European Union is not the only alternative: The fall of the far-left Syriza
government in Greece
is another distinct possibility. The EU's ponderous, compromise-prone
decision-making machine can be tough when challenged by mavericks -- just ask
David Cameron or Plamen Oresharski.
When Alexis
Tsipras visited a World War II memorial shortly after becoming prime minister
to remind Germany that it
owes Greece
for Hitler-era crimes, German Chancellor Angela Merkel probably could not help
but see it as an extension of Syriza's earlier rhetoric comparing her
government to the Nazis. It should be no wonder German Finance Minister
Wolfgang Schaeuble is unwilling to discuss writing off Greek debt after
Syriza's newspaper described him as a "Gauleiter" and no one from the
Greek leadership addressed the insult.
Instead,
they mostly keep talking as if their election campaign were still on. Finance
Minister Yanis Varoufakis on Sunday compared Greece 's international bailout to
an addictive drug. "We have resembled drug addicts craving the next
dose," Financial Times quoted Varoufakis as saying. "What this
government is all about is ending the addiction." The finance minister's
point is that Greece
doesn't want the next tranche of the bailout: It would rather go "cold
turkey". To EU and German officials, this will sound like a rejection of
help that cost them much effort and domestic political goodwill.
Merkel is
said to be avoiding a one-on-one meeting with Tsipras to give him a feeling of
isolation. She is also now echoing Schaeuble's tough stand on debt relief --
although if she were a flamboyant leader in the Tsipras mold, she would
probably say what Barbara Wesel, Brussels
correspondent for the German international broadcaster, Deutsche Welle, wrote
in a recent column:
You can
believe that cheek will win out. And you can be drunk with your own power and
put your hands in your pockets when you say goodbye to one of your European
colleagues. But you can't continually insult the people you have to negotiate
with, whether it's about national bankruptcy or Greece 's exit from the EU. Angela
Merkel doesn't have to accept the comparisons with Hitler and Schaeuble has
nothing to do with any "Fourth Reich."
Treat
Merkel as an adversary, and she will show she's a bad one to have. Cameron
learned that after clashing with Merkel over the appointment of Jean-Claude
Juncker as European Commission president. The British prime minister, who
vocally opposed the nomination, ended up isolated and even mocked by colleagues
as he took his solitary stand. His humiliation may have pushed the U.K. a few
inches closer to an EU exit, but it showed the rest of the bloc's members that
public grandstanding is not the best way to advance their agendas.
Another
recent example of EU firmness concerns Bulgaria ,
a country much closer geographically and in terms of population size to Greece than the U.K. In June, 2014, Brussels told the Balkan
nation to stop work on the Russian South Stream gas pipeline project because it
violated certain EU rules. When the government of Bulgaria 's then prime minister
Plamen Oresharski refused, the bloc cut off tens of millions of regional
development funds and threatened even harsher measures. The government soon
fell, and Oresharski's opponent Boyko Borisov won an early election. He
complied with EU demands concerning South Stream, causing Russian President
Vladimir Putin to cancel the project.
Merkel will
not be alone if she decides to stonewall Syriza. Besides, she knows that Greek
voters never gave Syriza a mandate to take the country out of the euro area or
the EU itself. In fact, Tsipras explicitly promised during his campaign that
this wouldn't happen.
Right now,
Syriza is more popular in Greece
than Oresharski's cabinet was in Bulgaria at the time of his
confrontation with the EU. Yet, the party doesn't even have an outright
majority in the Greek parliament. If its brashness fails to deliver results and
only increases the Grexit threat, the Oresharski scenario becomes entirely
plausible. Syriza's fall under such circumstances would be highly desirable for
Merkel and other moderates in the EU, showing other countries that upstart
populist politicians are no match for the European project's architects and
that giving power to forces like Syriza or Spain's Podemos is a waste of time.
I still
don't consider this the most likely outcome. For all of its members' fiery
rhetoric, the Greek government was docile in the only contentious EU matter
that it has had to deal with in its first days in power. Despite Syriza's
opposition to sanctions on Russia ,
Greece
last week voted to extend them by six months, as Foreign Minister Nikos Kotzias
assured his EU colleagues: "We are in the mainstream; we are not the bad
boy."
EU leaders,
in reaching the requisite compromises on Greek debt, will probably force
themselves to regard the bombastic noise from Athens as the necessary cost for Syriza not to
disappoint its angry voters. More such noise, however, could make the
compromise politically difficult: it would be easily framed as giving in to the
"cheek" of left-wing demagogues from a small country on the outskirts
of Europe . Helping Greece , in that sense, would be an
ugly precedent instead of a noble act.
To contact
the author on this story:
Leonid
Bershidsky at lbershidsky@bloomberg.net
To contact
the editor on this story:
http://www.bloombergview.com/articles/2015-02-02/syriza-shouldn-t-underestimate-merkel
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