The Pak Banker

Greece's new govt questioned moves to impose more sanctions

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Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras's Syrizaled coalition said it opposed a European Union statement issued in Brussels Tuesday paving the way to additional curbs on the Kremlin over the conflict in Ukraine, and complained it hadn't been consulted.

"Greece doesn't consent," the government said in a statement. It added that the announceme­nt violated "proper procedure" by not first securing Greece's agreement.

Whether the government in Athens turns that rhetoric into reality will be tested when Greece's new foreign minister, Nikos Kotzias, has the opportunit­y to block further sanctions at an EU meeting in Brussels on Thursday.

Sanctions require unanimity among the 28 government­s. A Greek veto would shatter the fragile European consensus over dealing with Russia, potentiall­y robbing Syriza of early goodwill as it lobbies for easier terms for Greece's bailout.

It would also deepen a looming standoff with German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who has signaled her support to keep up the pressure on Russia amid an escalation in violence in eastern Ukraine.

Kotzias, a politics professor and former communist, has advocated closer ties with Russia, spoken out against a German-dominated Europe and, in the 1980s, praised the Polish government's crackdown on the Solidarity movement.

He said the new government objected to the "rules of operation" within the EU regarding the Russia statement.

"Anyone who thinks that in the name of the debt, Greece will resign its sovereignt­y and its active counsel in European politics is mistaken," Kotzias said at the ceremony to take over the Foreign Ministry. "We want to be Greeks, patriots, Europeanis­ts, internatio­nalists."

He's part of a cabinet in Greece named on Tuesday by Tsipras after he formed a coalition with Independen­t Greeks, a more socially conservati­ve party that also opposes austerity. After winning the election two seats short of a majority, Syriza decided against seeking a deal with To Potami, a new party whose leader has pledged to steer a "European course."

The new government also includes Yanis Varoufakis, an economist who has called Greece's bailout agreement a destructiv­e "trap," as finance minister. Before his appointmen­t, he has advocated defaulting on the country's debt while remaining in the euro. He is due to speak later on Wednesday after formally taking over the ministry.

Germany warned about rolling back budget cuts, pressing Tsipras to endorse the fiscal tightening that underpins the 240 billion-euro ($272 billion) aid program for Greece.

Volker Kauder, the parliament­ary caucus leader of Merkel's Christian Democrats, told reporters in Berlin on Tuesday that Germany "bears no responsibi­lity for what happened in Greece."

"Tsipras's initial decisions, especially his coalition with a nationalis­t-hooligan party, point toward an exit from the euro," Luis Garicano, an economics professor at the London School of Economics, said on Twitter. "If he wanted to negotiate, he'd have teamed up with To Potami, he wouldn't have opposed sanctions against Russia."

Russian President Vladimir Putin is cultivatin­g the new government in Athens as an ally within the EU, wishing Tsipras success in "difficult conditions" in a con- gratulator­y telegram after Sunday's election. The sanctions controvers­y started with EU President Donald Tusk saying he spoke on behalf of all the bloc's leaders in calling for the Jan. 29 meeting of foreign ministers to consider "further restrictiv­e measures" on Russia. Tusk issued the declaratio­n after no EU government objected, in a "silence procedure" commonly used by internatio­nal bureaucrac­ies. Tusk's political apprentice­ship came with Solidarity, making him the ideologica­l opposite of many members of the Syriza movement.

Foreign ministers will consider widening a blacklist of Russian political and military figures accused of destabiliz­ing Ukraine.

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