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Daily Telegraph columnist Liam Halligan, a firm proponent of Glass-Steagall who is normally measured and even understated in his commentary, penned an unusually agitated column on Jan. 31 over the Greek crisis.

“Greece and its official creditors are now issuing full- blooded threats and counter-threats regardless of the impact on financial markets… There is concern the Syriza-led coalition could take direct control of Greek lenders and write off billions of euros in household loans, destroying bank balance sheets in a frenzy of populist contractual vandalism.”

Lyndon LaRouche commented in response:

“But that is sensible; it is exactly what they should do.”

Halligan went on to warn that

“the current [greek] bail-out package expires at the end of February. After that, Greek banks won’t be able to borrow from the ECB—which would result in a bank run, a shut-down of depositors and almost certainly, widespread civic unrest. A new deal simply must be done by month-end.”

Halligan added that the new Tsipras government in Greece said it had not been consulted on the latest EU statement on Russian sanctions, and that it was therefore not “unanimous,” as reported.

“This amounts to a diplomatic hand grenade, lobbed directly at Brussels. EU sanctions against Russia will expire in March unless renewed by the unanimous decision of member states, giving Greece an effective veto.”

Halligan then concluded: “If these Greek debt negotiations go wrong, and positions become so entrenched and tempers unchecked that the madness of an outright default prevails, or even looks very likely, financial markets across the Eurozone and the entire world could endure a Lehman- style systemic lurch.”

Daily Telegraph columnist Liam Halligan, a firm proponent of Glass-Steagall who is normally measured and even understated in his commentary, penned an unusually agitated column on Jan. 31 over the Greek crisis.

“Greece and its official creditors are now issuing full- blooded threats and counter-threats regardless of the impact on financial markets… There is concern the Syriza-led coalition could take direct control of Greek lenders and write off billions of euros in household loans, destroying bank balance sheets in a frenzy of populist contractual vandalism.”

Lyndon LaRouche commented in response:

“But that is sensible; it is exactly what they should do.”

Halligan went on to warn that

“the current [greek] bail-out package expires at the end of February. After that, Greek banks won’t be able to borrow from the ECB—which would result in a bank run, a shut-down of depositors and almost certainly, widespread civic unrest. A new deal simply must be done by month-end.”

Halligan added that the new Tsipras government in Greece said it had not been consulted on the latest EU statement on Russian sanctions, and that it was therefore not “unanimous,” as reported.

“This amounts to a diplomatic hand grenade, lobbed directly at Brussels. EU sanctions against Russia will expire in March unless renewed by the unanimous decision of member states, giving Greece an effective veto.”

Halligan then concluded: “If these Greek debt negotiations go wrong, and positions become so entrenched and tempers unchecked that the madness of an outright default prevails, or even looks very likely, financial markets across the Eurozone and the entire world could endure a Lehman- style systemic lurch.”

British policy outlets are displaying unalloyed fear over what Greece portends for the future of the Eurozone, and their entire trans-Atlantic financial system.

“The dam has burst,” wailed Jeremy Warner, the assistant editor of the Daily Telegraph.

“There’s not much doubt where the biggest threat to global economic stability comes from right now—it’s the pesky euro.”

Fellow Telegraph columnist Ambrose Evans-Pritchard, after cataloging the recent raft of threats against Greece coming from hysterical European bankers and politicians, stressed that the Tsipras government in Greece has given no indication of buckling under the pressure. Evans-Pritchard concluded that “this spectacular game of chicken” is going to continue “until one side or the other blinks.” But, he warned, things may not go smoothly, quoting Professor Ashoka Mody, a former IMF bail-out chief in Europe, saying that the ECB’s actions are

“extremely irresponsible… I have never heard of such outlandish threats before. The EU authorities have no idea what the consequences of Grexit might be, or what unknown tremors might hit the global payments system. They are playing with fire… What they ignore at their peril is the huge political contagion. It would be slower- moving than a financial crisis but the effects on Europe would be devastating.”

An even more pointed warning was issued on Jan. 28 by Ian Bremmer, head of the Council on Foreign Relations’ Eurasia Group, who argued that Greece could well bolt from the trans-Atlantic sector altogether (both the eurozone and NATO), and align with Russia and China and the BRICS process—although Bremmer doesn’t dare mention the BRICS by name. The way he put it was:

“The Russians could push the issue and tell the Greeks, ‘Hey, we’ll bail you out, but you have to leave NATO and join the Shanghai Cooperation Organization. And you’re giving us access to the base’ [a warm water port]. That would absolutely be attractive for Syriza. And frankly, I might even see the Chinese joining in, since they’ve already put a lot of cash into the Port of Piraeus, for example.”

British policy outlets are displaying unalloyed fear over what Greece portends for the future of the Eurozone, and their entire trans-Atlantic financial system.

“The dam has burst,” wailed Jeremy Warner, the assistant editor of the Daily Telegraph.

“There’s not much doubt where the biggest threat to global economic stability comes from right now—it’s the pesky euro.”

Fellow Telegraph columnist Ambrose Evans-Pritchard, after cataloging the recent raft of threats against Greece coming from hysterical European bankers and politicians, stressed that the Tsipras government in Greece has given no indication of buckling under the pressure. Evans-Pritchard concluded that “this spectacular game of chicken” is going to continue “until one side or the other blinks.” But, he warned, things may not go smoothly, quoting Professor Ashoka Mody, a former IMF bail-out chief in Europe, saying that the ECB’s actions are

“extremely irresponsible… I have never heard of such outlandish threats before. The EU authorities have no idea what the consequences of Grexit might be, or what unknown tremors might hit the global payments system. They are playing with fire… What they ignore at their peril is the huge political contagion. It would be slower- moving than a financial crisis but the effects on Europe would be devastating.”

An even more pointed warning was issued on Jan. 28 by Ian Bremmer, head of the Council on Foreign Relations’ Eurasia Group, who argued that Greece could well bolt from the trans-Atlantic sector altogether (both the eurozone and NATO), and align with Russia and China and the BRICS process—although Bremmer doesn’t dare mention the BRICS by name. The way he put it was:

“The Russians could push the issue and tell the Greeks, ‘Hey, we’ll bail you out, but you have to leave NATO and join the Shanghai Cooperation Organization. And you’re giving us access to the base’ [a warm water port]. That would absolutely be attractive for Syriza. And frankly, I might even see the Chinese joining in, since they’ve already put a lot of cash into the Port of Piraeus, for example.”

Prison Planet.com | Hours before the players take to the gridiron Alex Jones reveals who the winner of the 49th American Football Superbowl will be.