Eurozone finance
ministers are preparing for a vital third meeting, in Brussels, to try to solve
the crisis over Greece's bail-out.
The existing bailout
deal expires at the end of the month and Greece could run out of money without
a new accord. Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras won elections in late January on a
platform of rejecting the austerity measures tied to the bailout.
A Greek government
source said on Thursday the Eurogroup had "just two choices: to accept or
reject the Greek request. We will now discover who wants to find a solution,
and who does not". Also on Friday, the Greek parliament is set to vote on
a series of social reform bills that flout its bailout obligations.
'Constructive'
A German finance
ministry spokesman said Greece's new suggestion was "not a substantial
proposal for a solution". Later on Thursday, Mr Tsipras spoke with German
Chancellor Angela Merkel by telephone.
One Greek government
official described the 50-minute call as "constructive", adding:
"The conversation was held in a positive climate, geared towards finding a
mutually beneficial solution for Greece and the eurozone."
The United States
urged European leaders and Greece to all make concessions. Treasury Secretary
Jack Lew spoke by phone with several senior European officials.
Meanwhile, Italian
Prime Minister Matteo Renzi spoke to Mr Tsipras and European Commission
President Jean-Claude Juncker in a further effort to strike a deal, an Italian
government source said.
'Outraged'
Greece formally
requested a six-month extension to its eurozone loan agreement on Thursday,
offering major concessions as it raced to avoid running out of cash within
weeks.
The BBC's Mark Lowen
in Athens says Germany's swift rejection of the proposal suggested "a rift
between Brussels and Berlin at the very highest level".
A top European
official said the stand-off had come down to a clash of personalities between
German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble, who objected to the negotiating
style of his Greek counterpart, Yanis Varoufakis.
"There is a real
problem of personalities and I understand that. Schaeuble is outraged by
comments made by Varoufakis," the official said.
The Greek request
letter includes a pledge to maintain "fiscal balance" for a six-month
period, while it negotiates with eurozone partners.
The Greek government
was also reported as saying that its extension proposal was in order to give
Athens enough time, without the threat of "blackmail and time
deficits", to draw up a new agreement with Europe for growth over the next
four years.
The German finance
ministry spokesman said the Greek request was an attempt at "bridge
financing, without meeting the requirements of the programme. The letter does
not meet the criteria agreed upon in the Eurogroup on Monday."
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