| 
			 
			  
			
			
			 
			 
			
			  
			by Tyler Durden  
			02 April 2016 
			
			from
			
			ZeroHedge Website 
			
			  
			
			  
			
			  
			
			  
			
			
			  
			
			Board of Governors, IMF 
			 
			
			(Wikipedia) 
			
			  
			
			  
			
				
					
						
							
							Read this article very 
							carefully.  
							  
							
							The goal of Technocracy 
							is to convert the global economic system at the 
							expense of Capitalism and Free Enterprise, and the 
							Technocrats at the IMF are doing their best to bring 
							it about.  
							  
							
							They are plotting to 
							destabilize Europe by precipitating a ‘credit event’ 
							in Greece. European Trilateral Commission member and 
							UN Envoy on Emmigration Policy Peter Sutherland has 
							stated repeatedly that Sustainable Development 
							(Technocracy) cannot be successful except in a 
							multi-cultural society.  
							  
							
							Hence, Europe is invaded 
							by Islamic hordes, quickly leading to 
							destabilization.  
							  
							
							Now the IMF is executing 
							a pincer movement to finish Europe off. To say that 
							this is political hardball would be an 
							understatement gigantes.  
							
							
							Source 
						 
					 
				 
			 
			
			  
			
			  
			
			One of the recurring concerns involving 
			Europe's seemingly perpetual economic, financial and social crises, 
			is that these have been largely predetermined, "scripted" and 
			deliberate acts.  
			  
			
			This is something the former head of the 
			Bank of England
			
			admitted one month ago
			when Mervyn King said 
			that Europe's economic depression is the result of 
			"deliberate" policy choices made by EU elites.  
			  
			
			It is also what AIG Banque strategist 
			Bernard Connolly said back in 2008 when laying out "What 
			Europe Wants". 
			
				
				To 
				use global issues as excuses to extend its power: 
				
					- 
					
					
					environmental issues: 
					increase control over member countries; advance idea of 
					global governance  
					- 
					
					
					terrorism: use 
					excuse for greater control over police and judicial issues; 
					increase extent of surveillance  
					- 
					
					
					global financial crisis: 
					kill two birds (free market; Anglo-Saxon 
					economies) with one stone (Europe-wide regulator; attempts 
					at global financial governance)  
					- 
					
					
					EMU: create a 
					crisis to force introduction of "European economic 
					government"  
				 
			 
			
			This morning we got another confirmation 
			of how supernational organizations "plan" European crises in advance 
			to further their goals, when Wikileaks
			
			published
			the
			transcript of a teleconference (WikiLeaks 
			Transcript 19 March 2016 IMF Teleconference on Greece) that took place on March 19, 2016 
			between the top two IMF officials in charge of managing the Greek 
			debt crisis, 
			
				
					- 
					
					Poul Thomsen (below left), the head of the 
					IMF's European Department,   
					- 
					
					Delia Velkouleskou (below right), the IMF 
					Mission Chief for Greece  
				 
			 
			  
			  
			
			   
			  
			  
			
			In the transcript, the IMF staffers are 
			caught on tape planning to tell Germany the organization would 
			abandon the troika if the IMF and the commission fail to reach an 
			agreement on Greek debt relief.  
			  
			
			More to the point, the IMF 
			officials say that a
			
			threat of an imminent financial catastrophe
			as the Guardian puts 
			it, is needed to force other players into accepting its measures 
			such as cutting Greek pensions and working conditions, or as 
			Bloomberg puts it,  
			
				
				"considering 
				a plan to cause a credit event in Greece and destabilize 
				Europe." 
			 
			
			According to the leaked conversation, 
			
			the IMF - which has been pushing for a debt haircut for Greece ever 
			since last Augusts' 3rd Greek bailout - believes a credit event as 
			only thing that could trigger a Greek deal. 
			
			  
			
			The "event" is hinted as 
			taking place some time around the 
			
			June 23 Brexit referendum. 
			  
			
			As noted by Bloomberg, 
			the leak shows 
			officials linking Greek issue with U.K. referendum risking general 
			political destabilization in Europe.  
			  
			
			The leaked transcript reveals how the 
			IMF plans to use Greece as a pawn in its ongoing negotiation with 
			Germany's chancellor in order to achieve the desired Greek debt 
			reduction which Germany has been pointedly against:  
			
				
				in the leak we 
			learn about the intention of IMF to threaten German Chancellor 
			Angela Merkel to force her to accept the IMF's demands at a critical 
			point.  
			 
			
			From the transcript: 
			
				
				
				
				THOMSEN:
				 Well, I 
				don't know. But this is... I think about it differently. 
				 
				
				  
				
				What is 
				going to bring it all to a decision point? In the past there has 
				been only one time when the 
				decision has 
				been made and then that was when they were about to run out of 
				money seriously and to default. Right? 
				 
				
				  
				
				
				
				VELKOULESKOU:
				 
				Right!  
				
				  
				
				  
				
				
				
				THOMSEN:
				 And 
				possibly this is what is going to happen again.  
				
				  
				
				In that case,
				it drags on until July, and 
				clearly the Europeans are not going to have any discussions for 
				a month before the Brexits and so, at some stage they 
				will want to take a break and then they want to start again 
				after the European referendum.  
				
				  
				
				
				
				VELKOULESKOU:
				 
				That's right.  
				
				  
				
				  
				
				
				
				THOMSEN:
				 That is 
				one possibility. 
				 
				
				  
				
				Another possibility is one that I thought would 
				have happened already and I am surprised that it has not 
				happened, is that, because of 
				
				the refugee situation, they take a decision... that 
				they want to come to a conclusion. Ok?  
				
				  
				
				And the Germans raise the 
				issue of the management... and basically we at that time say, 
				
					
					"Look, you Mrs. Merkel you face a question, you have to think 
				about what is more costly: to go ahead without the IMF, would 
				the Bundestag say 'The IMF is not on board'? 
					or to pick the 
				debt relief that we think that Greece needs in order to keep us 
				on board?"  
				 
				
				
				Right? 
				 
				
				  
				
				
				That is really the issue. 
				 
				
				  
				
				*** 
				
				  
				
				
				
				VELKOULESKOU:
				 I 
				agree that we need an event, 
				but I don't know what that will be.  
				
				  
				
				But I think Dijsselbloem is 
				trying not to generate an event, but to jump start this 
				discussion somehow on debt, that essentially is about us being 
				on board or not at the end of the day.  
				
				  
				
				
				
				THOMSEN:
				 Yeah, but 
				you know, that discussion of the measures and the discussion of 
				the debt can go on forever, until some high up...
				until they hit the July payment 
				or until the leaders decide that we need to come to an agreement. 
				 
				
				  
				
				But there is nothing in there that otherwise is going to force a 
				compromise. Right? 
				
				  
				
				It is going to go on forever. 
			 
			
			The IMF is also shown as continuing to 
			pull the strings of the Greek government which has so far refused to 
			compromise on any major reforms, as has been the case since the 
			first bailout.  
			  
			  
			
			
			  
			  
			  
			
			As the
			
			Guardian notes, Greek finance minister 
			Euclid Tsakalotos has 
			accused the IMF of imposing draconian measures, including on pension 
			reform.  
			  
			
			The transcript quotes Velculescu as 
			saying:  
			
				
				"What is interesting though is that 
				[Greece] did give in… they did give a little bit on both the 
				income tax reform and on the… both on the tax credit and the 
				supplementary pensions".  
			 
			
			Thomsen's view was that the Greeks, 
			
				
				"are not even getting close [to 
				coming] around to accept our views".  
			 
			
			Velculescu argued that, 
			
				
				"if [the Greek government] get 
				pressured enough, they would… But they don't have any incentive 
				and they know that the commission is willing to compromise, so 
				that is the problem." 
			 
			
			Below is Paul Mason's
			
			summary of what is shaping up as the next political scandal. 
			
				
				The 
				International Monetary Fund has been caught, red handed, 
				plotting to stage a "credit event" that forces Greece to the 
				edge of bankruptcy, using the pretext of the Brexit referendum. 
				
				  
				
				No, this is not the plot of the next 
				Bond movie. It is the transcript of a teleconference between the 
				IMF's chief negotiator, Poul Thomsen and Delia Velculescu, head 
				of the IMF mission to Greece. 
				 
				
				  
				
				Released by Wikileaks, the 
				discussion took place in Athens just before the IMF walked out 
				of talks aimed at giving Greece the green light for the next 
				stage of its bailout.  
				
				  
				
				The situation is: the IMF does not 
				believe the numbers being used by both Greece and Europe to do 
				the next stage of the deal. It does not want to take part in the 
				bailout.  
				
				  
				
				Meanwhile the EU cannot do the deal without the IMF 
				because the German parliament won't allow it.  
				
				  
				
				*** 
				
				  
				
				Let me decode. 
				
				 
				
				  
				
				
				An "event" is a 
				financial crisis bringing Greece close to default. Just like 
				last year, when the banks closed, millions of people faced 
				economic and psychological catastrophe. 
				 
				
				  
				
				Only this time, the IMF wants to 
				inflict that catastrophe on a nation holding tens of thousands 
				of refugees and tasked with one of the most complex and legally 
				dubious international border policing missions in modern 
				history.  
				
				  
				
				The 
				Greek government is furious:  
				
					
					
					"we are not going to let the IMF 
				play with fire," a source told me. 
				 
				
				But the issue is out of Greek hands. 
				 
				
				  
				
				In the end, as Thomsen hints in the transcript, only the 
				European Commission and above all the German government can 
				decide to honor the terms of the deal it did to bail Greece out 
				last July.  
				
				  
				
				The transcript, though 
				received with fury and incredulity in Greece, will drop like a 
				bombshell into the Commission and the ECB. It is they who are 
				holding E300bn+ of Greek debt.  
				
				  
				
				
				It is the whole 
				of Europe, in other words, that the IMF is conspiring to hit 
				with the shock doctrine. 
			 
			
			The Greeks are understandably angry and 
			confused. 
			  
			
			As Bloomberg reported earlier, 
			 
			
				
				"Greece wants to know whether 
				WikiLeaks report regarding IMF anticipating a Greek default at 
				about the time of the U.K. June 23 referendum on its EU 
				membership is the fund's official position" government 
				spokeswoman Olga Gerovasili says Saturday in e-mailed statement. 
			 
			
			For its part, an IMF spokesman in e-mail 
			Saturday said it doesn't, 
			
				
				"comment on leaks or supposed 
				reports of internal discussions." 
			 
			
			  
			
			   |