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LaRouche Warns
Europe: Don’t Make the U.S. Mistake; High-Gain Creditors like Santander
Have to Take the Hit
February
10, 2010 (LPAC)—On the eve of the EU Summit, LaRouche warns Europe:
don't make the U.S. mistake of bailing out Wall Street; the high-gain
creditors like Banco Santander have to take the hit.
With the European Union scheduled to hold an urgent summit on Feb. 11 to
address the financial crisis sweeping the entire eurozone, the world’s
leading economist Lyndon LaRouche today warned European leaders: “Do not
make the mistake that the US made in bailing out Wall Street. If you do
that in Europe, you are going to sink Europe, because Europe is more
vulnerable than the U.S. It is the high-gain creditors, like the London-run
Spanish Banco Santander, that are going to have to take the main burden
of the hit. Anything else would just reproduce in Europe a far worse
form of the crisis we’ve experienced in the U.S.”
In the lead-up to the Brussels EU summit, prominent voices have gone
public with open calls for dictatorship and “empire”—exactly as LaRouche
warned would occur under British sponsorship. According to the London
Independent, EU President Herman Van Rompuy has sent a letter to summit
participants, with secret annexes demanding that all member nations, not
just crisis-wracked Greece, be put under supra-national EU receivership.
The Independent quotes an EU source saying bluntly: “What we need is the
same kind of mechanism that we have now imposed on Greece in order to
monitor and survey euro-zone countries. So the idea is to put all
European economies under surveillance. You can expect some important
decisions to be taken this week” at the EU summit.
Simultaneously, EU Commission adviser Alberto Giovannini, who led the
group that set up the technical transition from national currencies to
the euro, is quoted in today’s Italian daily Il Sole 24 Ore stating
unabashedly: “History teaches us that empires are more efficient and
achieve great prosperity, because the imperial model is successful with
an extended geography.”
Although much attention has been mis-focused on Greece, LaRouche has
emphasized that the epicenter of the European crisis is not Greece but
Spain, and its Banco Santander. For example, of total German bank
exposure in the eurozone of some 540 billion euros, Greek debt accounts
for only 43 billion, or 8% of the total. Spain, by contrast, amounts to
240 billion euros, or 44% of the total.
“The problem is Spain,” LaRouche stated today, “and the problem is
Santander. Santander is a chronic problem; it’s not a problem that can
be remedied by bailout.
"You have to write down the claims of institutions such as Banco
Santander.” The figures on Santander’s phony assets in Brazil, the U.K.
and Spain, LaRouche explained, “show that Santander has to accept a
massive write-down of its claimed assets, because they are unsustainable.
You cannot sink all of Europe for the sake of Santander and its
associates of the Inter Alpha banking group,” which includes Santander’s
immediate British controller, the Royal Bank of Scotland, run by the
royal household.
“The whole system of the Inter-Alpha group is depending upon the blood-sucking
rate of charges to Brazil, which cannot be sustained. Therefore, the
write-down of the nominal assets of Santander, and what prove to be
relevant associated parts of the Inter-Alpha group, is required.”
LaRouche, as the most qualified international expert on the crisis,
warned: “We have to preempt the situation; it’s getting out of control.
The U.S. case shows that bailout does not work: it’s the high-gain
creditors that have to bite the bullet on this one. Don’t make the
mistake that was made in the U.S. of bailing out Wall Street. Europe
could not survive a commitment to do a Wall Street-style bailout in
Europe. The high-gain creditors have to take the hit. That isn’t going
to solve the problem, but it’s a way of managing the problem.”
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