"Anti-Putin"
Alliance Fraying: Germany, Slovakia, Greece, Czech Republic Urge End To Russian
Sanctions
Submitted
by Tyler
Durden on 08/16/2014 11:04 -0400
Last
week Germany reported that in the second quarter, its
GDP declined by 0.2%, worse than Wall Street consensus. This happened
a few shorts days after Italy reported a second consecutive decline in its own
GDP, becoming the first Europen country to enter a triple-dip recession. What's
worse, Europe's slowdown took place before
the
brunt of Russian sanctions hit. Surely in the third quarter the GDP of Germany,
a nation whose
exports accounts for 41% of GDP, will be even worse, with whisper
numbers of -1% being thrown casually around, but one thing is certain: Europe is
about to enter its third recession since the Lehman collapse just as we forecast
at the end of 2013, a "triple-dip" which may become an outright depression
unless Draghi injects a few trillion in credit money (which will do nothing but
delay the inevitable and make it that much worse once the can can no longer be
kicked), and unless normal trade ties with Russia are
restored.
Which
means one thing: for Europe to resume the status quo, it needs to break away
from the "western" alliance and the sanctions imposed upon the Kremlin which
solely benefit the populist agenda of Washington, and certainly not Europe
proper, which it is now quite clear, is far more reliant on Russia than vice
versa. it is also something Putin apparently was aware of from the very
beginning.
And
now, that realization is starting to spread to Europe's own countries, which -
while the new cold war was only one of rhetoric were perfectly happy to go for
the ride - but now that trade war has finally broken out, suddenly increasingly
more want out.
As
we reported previously, it all started
with the Greeks, a nation of heavy food exports into Russia, who were
the first to announce their displeasure with the "Stop Putin"
coalition:
the
moment Russia retaliated, the grand alliance started to
crack.
Enter Greece which has hundreds
of millions in food exports to Russia, and which was the first
country to hint that it may splinter from the western "pro-sanctions" alliance.
According
to Bloomberg, earlier today the Greek foreign minister and former PM said that
"we are in continuous deliberations in order to have the smallest possible
consequences, and if possible no significant impact
whatsoever."
...
And
making it very clear that this will be a major political issue was a statement
by the main opposition party Syriza which today said that the Greek government's
"blind
obedience to the Cold War strategies of Brussels and Washington will be
disastrous for country's agriculture."
In a moment of surprising clarity, Syriza asked govt to immediately lift all
sanctions to Russia, as they don't contribute to a solution of the Ukrainian
crisis, and "instead
fuel an economic and trade war, in which Greece has unfortunately become
involved."
Syriza concluded that the government hasn't weighted Greece's special interests
and bilateral relations with Russia.
Then
it was Slovakia whose premier Robert Fico criticized
Ukraine for preparing sanctions against Russian persons and
companies, and he has called on Ukraine not to approve them, expressing concerns
that the legislation could result in a halt to natural gas
supplies.
If
the conflict between Ukraine and Russia escalates, the legal norm could cause
interruption of natural gas supplies to Slovakia (and to Western Europe) via
Ukraine from Russia, he said.
Slovakia
depends on supplies of Russian gas. However, if gas supplies via Ukraine were
interrupted, Slovakia would get gas through backflow from the
West.
"It
is strange that a country that has signed an association agreement with the EU
and which we are trying to help is taking one-sided steps that endanger the
individual economic interests of EU member countries, instead of coordinating
its approach with the EU,"
Fico said.
"We
do not want to be a hostage in the Russian-Ukrainian problem. We expect Ukraine
not to adopt formal steps that, if implemented, can endanger our interests. A
country that has signed the association agreement should not behave like that,"
Fico
declared.
Poland
too complained
last week, however for now it finds the fault not with the "alliance"
but with Russia for daring to retaliate to western
sanctions.
Poland's
agriculture minister went on television to announce the country was taking
action against Russia's new import ban. "We
believe Russia has broken international law in both its embargo against Poland
and its embargo against the EU," Marek
Sawicki said. Russia banned the import of Polish fruit and vegetables in early
August - a move Sawicki said would cost Poland 0.6 percent of
GDP.
...
"If
a WTO member state believes another WTO member state has taken a measure that is
not in conformity with WTO rules, the affected WTO member state may request
mediation," attorney and WTO expert Eric Pickett said.
Good
luck. It is only a matter of time before this futile anger at Putin turns not to
the logical response to sanctions, but at the instigator of the sanctions
themselves.
Then
it was most vibrant economy in central Europe, the Czech Republic, where
overnight the finance minister voiced the loudest anger at Russian sanctions
yet. From Bloomberg:
- SANCTIONS ON RUSSIA MAKE NO SENSE, CZECH FINANCE MINISTER SAYS
And
finally, it is the country whose fate is what this conflict is all about,
because should Germany decide it has had enough of DC's geopolitical
brinksmanship, one which always "costs" European allies far more than it does
the US, and aligns with the Russia-China-India axis, then the "Eurasian
Crescent" will be complete, and the countdown to reserve currency transition may
officially begin.
Sure
enough, Bloomberg reports that sanctions against Russia are hurting sentiment at
German companies, according to Focus magazine which cites the BGA Federation of
German Wholesale and Foreign Trade, and the DIHK German Association of Chambers
of Commerce and Industry.
According
to the magazine, "loss
of trust in Russian partners is hurting business more than the sanctions
themselves, as German companies cut trade more than required."
The
implications are clear: cost-benefit analysis has shifted too far to the
left, and while Germany was ok with supporting the "west" in its
game of escalating sanctions vs Putin, at this point there is no further
support, and in fact the pendulum is starting to swing in the opposite
direction.
So
with increasingly more eastern and central European nations vocally opining
against Russian sanctions, and with the Ukraine government now clearly engaging
in open provocations to curry popular support for some "unfathomable"
warmongering cause (unless of course it can provide evidence it did indeed
destroy a Russian military convoy on its territory), how long until the
"western" alliance finally folds under its own weight and has no choice but to
roll back the sanctions and de-escalate, in the process handing Putin the
biggest diplomatic knockout round yet?
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