The Wall Street Journal
By IAN TALLEY
Don’t
panic. There’s nothing to worry about.
That’s
essentially what former U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said in 2011,
when asked if Europe’s crisis threatened the U.S. financial system. “No,
absolutely no,” Mr. Geithner told House lawmakers in an October 7 hearing. “The
overall picture is very limited direct exposure,” he said.
That’s
contrary to the narrative presented Wednesday by Mark Sobel, who had a front
row seat to the crisis as a top Treasury diplomat and is now the
administration’s nominee to represent the U.S. on the International Monetary
Fund’s executive board.
“Had Greece
defaulted or left the euro at the time, I feel there would have been
potentially massive contagion also within the euro zone,” Mr. Sobel told a
Senate nomination hearing Wednesday. “This would have had a tremendously
detrimental impact not only on the — not only on the world but particularly in
the U.S. ,”
he said.