Germans suspicious of Greece’s reform plans
However, open scepticism among the chancellorâs allies has spawned media portrayals of a Western-style showdown.
Unsurprisingly perhaps, German media have cast Greeceâs leftist prime minister as the outlaw and the conservative German chancellor as a sheriff fighting to keep the eurozone together.
âWhen the Greek outlaw Alexis Tsipras meets Angela Merkel â seen as all-powerful in many countries â all of Europe will be watching spellbound,â wrote Welt am Sonntag.The Frankfurter Allgemeine reminded Tsipras that the EU âis not the Wild Westâ.
Sticking to the Wild West imagery, a cartoon in Greeceâs To Vima newspaper depicted a sweating Tsipras in dungarees pumping an old-fashioned railway handcar uphill while Merkel timed him.
Both leaders would be aghast at this confrontation scenario.
Although Merkel acknowledged last week that she and Tsipras would talk âand perhaps also argueâ, she said it would not be a defining moment in the standoff between Athens and its eurozone creditors over the terms of its âŹ240bn bailout deals.
Tsipras told Greek newspaper Kathimerini he saw their talks, which will include a joint news conference at 6.15pm local time today, as âa meeting that will not be âunder pressureâ from negotiationsâ.
At last weekâs EU summit, Greece promised to meet creditorsâ demands to present an economic reform package within days to unlock the cash it needs to avoid crashing out of the euro â a dire prospect for Germany, the currency zoneâs largest economy.
Despite Merkelâs assurances that she did not expect Tsipras to bring these commitments in his briefcase to Berlin, her own coalition upped the ante by demanding precisely that.
German politicians are openly sceptical about Greeceâs new leaders, none more so than 72-year-old finance minister Wolfgang Schaeuble who has clashed repeatedly with his unruly 53-year-old Greek peer Yanis Varoufakis. Schaeuble says Athens has âtotally destroyed the trust of its European partnersâ.
âIt would be good if Tsipras can convince the chancellor [today] that he grasps the seriousness of the situation,â Markus Soeder, Bavariaâs conservative state finance minister said. âSo far, Greece has promised but not delivered.â
âI expect [Tsipras] to present this list in his talks with the chancellor ,â Thomas Oppermann, parliamentary leader of Merkelâs Social Democrat coalition partners said. âI want to know once and for all if Greece is ready to reform or not.â
With Berlin braced for Greece coming back for yet more aid in a matter of months, Merkelâs supporters look unlikely to OK a third bailout without real evidence of progress on reforms. âNothing will happen if the Greek government is not crystal-clear in its willingness to reform,â said Oppermann.
The Greek governmentâs revival of reparation claims from the Nazi occupation in the Second World War has added to the Greco-German tensions.
Germany is conscious of its historical responsibility but reluctant to link this to eurozone policy.
Reuters





