Sunday Mirror (Northern Ireland)

BY YANIS VAROUFAKIS

Greece’s former finance minister and co-founder of the DiEM25 movement

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PRIME Minister May is keen to avoid a defeat at the hands of EU negotiator­s determined to do to the UK that which they did to Greece in 2015.

Correctly, she has set out to arm herself with a credible threat.

The problemis that she mayhave miscalcula­ted her optimal strategy.

By making a hard Brexit the default of the negotiatio­ns’ process, Mrs May has secured its credibilit­y.

However, a credible threat can still produce an undesirabl­e outcome.

London’s greatest miscalcula­tion would be to assume that the EU’s negotiator­s are committed to the bloc’s economic interests.

Whilst negotiatin­g Greece’ s debt to the EU with them, I realised in horror that they cared very little about getting their moneyback and a great deal more about shoring up their relative positions in the games they play with one another – even if this sacrificed large economic gains.

Mrs May will encounter this mindset soon in Berlin, Brussels and Paris.

If my experience­s are anything to go by, a frustratin­g two years await British negotiator­s. They are faced with the EU’s favourite tactics: The EU Run-Around (as Brussels refers them to Berlin and vice versa), the Swedish National Anthem Routine (the feeling that whether you have outlined a sensible proposal or sung Sweden’s national anthem they react the same way), the All-Or-Nothing Ruse (refusing to discuss any issue unless all issues are simultaneo­usly discussed) and the Blame Game (censuring YOU for

THEIR recalcitra­nce).

Nothing good, for Britain or for the EU, will comeout of this process. It is why I recommend a strategy that robs Brussels of all roomto manoeuvre.

That is: Request a Norway-like agreement for an interim period – something that they cannot refuse – and empower the next UK parliament to design and pursue Britain’s long-term relationsh­ip with the EU.

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