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Posts Tagged ‘Ireland’

ΟΙ ΙΡΛΑΝΔΟΙ ΤΡΑΠΕΖΙΤΕΣ(BANKSTERS) ΞΕΓΕΛΑΣΑΝ ΤΟΝ ΙΡΛΑΝΔΙΚΟ ΛΑΟ ΓΙΑ ΝΑ ΓΛΥΤΩΣΟΥΝ ΤΙΣ ΤΡΑΠΕΖΕΣ ΤΟΥΣ-LIVE ΣΥΝΟΜΙΛΙΕΣ ΑΠΟΚΑΛΥΠΤΟΥΝ ΤΟ ΜΕΓΕΘΟΣ ΤΗΣ ΠΡΟΔΟΣΙΑΣ ΤΟΥΣ ΠΡΟΣ ΤΟΥΣ ΙΡΛΑΝΔΟΥΣ ΦΟΡΟΛΟΓΟΥΜΕΝΟΥΣ

Posted by satyrikon στο 25 Ιουνίου, 2013

ΕΑΝ ΑΥΤΑ ΕΓΙΝΑΝ ΣΤΗΝ ΙΡΛΑΝΔΙΑ ΤΟΤΕ ΣΤΗΝ ΕΛΛΑΔΑ ΤΙ ΑΝΑΛΟΓΟ ΕΓΙΝΕ?

ΟΙ ΔΙΟΙΚΗΤΕΣ ΤΗΣ ΤΡΑΠΕΖΑΣ ΤΗΣ ΕΛΛΑΔΑΣ ΚΑΙ ΤΩΝ ΕΜΠΟΡΙΚΩΝ ΤΡΑΠΕΖΩΝ ΤΙ ΕΚΑΝΑΝ ?

ΚΑΙ ΤΩΡΑ ΠΛΗΡΩΝΕΙ Ο ΕΛΛΗΝΙΚΟΣ ΛΑΟΣ ΤΑ ΣΠΑΣΜΕΝΑ?

IRL002

IRL003

IRL004

Anglo-Irish Picked Bailout Number «Out Of My Arse» To Force Shared Taxpayer Sacrifice

English: Anglo Irish Bank, Great Victoria Stre...

English: Anglo Irish Bank, Great Victoria Street, Belfast, Northern Ireland, October 2010 (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

The Irish people, who sacrificed their sovereignty and billions of Euros, are waking this morning to a stunning revelation that the bailout to save Anglo-Irish was engineered by the Bank’s leadership to game as much money as possible from the central bank. The Irish Independent has secret recordings from the period in 2008 – below – that show senior management luring the State into giving it billions as they admit the EUR 7 billion number was «picked out of my arse.»

The bottom-line is that the bank knew they were in trouble and so decided to game the Central Bank and their regulators knowing that once the State began the flow of money, it would be unable to stop: «If they (Central Bank) saw the enormity of it up front, they might decide they have a choice. You know what I mean? They might say the cost to the taxpayer is too high . . . if it doesn’t look too big at the outset… if it looks big, big enough to be important, but not too big that it kind of spoils everything, then, then I think you have a chance. So I think it can creep up… [once] they have skin in the game Will there be an Irish Spring as the conspiracy theory of the banking bailout now become conspiracy fact?

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Η ΘΕΩΡΙΑ ΤΩΝ ΠΑΙΓΝΙΩΝ-Η ΙΤΑΛΙΑ ΚΑΙ Η ΙΡΛΑΝΔΙΑ (ΚΑΙ ΟΧΙ Η ΕΛΛΑΔΑ) ΘΑ ΒΓΟΥΝ ΑΠΟ ΤΟ ΕΥΡΩ-For Italy, It Is Game Theory Over | ZeroHedge

Posted by satyrikon στο 27 Ιουλίου, 2012

montibond-eurobond
montibond-eurobond (Photo credit: francesco elisei LI)

We discussed the use of Game Theory as a useful tool for analyzing Europe’s predicament in February and noted that it was far from optimal for any (peripheral or core) sovereign to pre-emptively ‘agree’ to austerity or Eurobonds respectively (even though that would make both better off).

This Prisoner’s Dilemma left the ugly Nash-Equilibrium game swinging
from a catastrophic break-up to a long, painful (and volatile)
continuation of the crisis. Recent work by BofAML’s FX team takes this a
step further and in assigning incentives and from a ‘do-not-cooperate’ Nash-equilibrium between Greece and Germany
(no Greek austerity and no Eurobonds) they extend the single-period
game across the entire group of European nations – with an ugly outcome.
Analyzing the costs and benefits of a voluntary exit from the euro-area
for the core and periphery countries, the admittedly over-simplified
results are worrying. Italy and Ireland (not Greece) are expected to exit first
(with Italy having a decent chance of an orderly exit) and while
Germany is the most likely to achieve an orderly exit, it has the lowest
incentive to exit the euro-zone – since growth, borrowing costs, and a
weakening balance sheet would cause more pain. Ultimately, they play the
game out and find while Germany could ‘bribe’ Italy to stay, they will not accept and Italy will optimally exit first – suggesting a very dark future ahead for the Eurozone and with EUR tail-risk so cheap, it seems an optimal trade – as only a weaker EUR can save the Euro.

The cost of insuring against EUR tail risk, which was already in retreat even before the EU Summit, has fallen further since, is at 2 year lows.

Should investors view these developments as a sign that the worst of
the crisis is now behind us, or should they see them as providing an opportunity to pick up cheap EUR tail risk insurance? We would argue for the latter.

To some extent, the drop in tail risk premium is a reflection of the poor performance of tail risk hedges in the past two years.
It is also possible that investors have reduced their exposures to
eurozone assets so much that their need for insurance against EUR
downside risk has simply diminished. We are skeptical about the wisdom
of this consensus. Recent political developments in the eurozone have
given us good reasons to think that the EUR breakup risk is not falling
but rising

We employ game theory and a cost-benefit analysis to explain
why in our view the market may be underpricing the voluntary exit of one
or more countries
.

Uncooperative outcome dominates

One of the most provocative observations of modern game theory is
that the most likely outcome is not always Pareto optimal. Put
differently, the dominant strategy for game players is not always to
cooperate, even when everyone is better off if they do.

The most famous illustration of this is the Prisoner’s Dilemma.
In this game, two men are arrested. The police offer both men a similar
deal. If one testifies against the other, and the other stays silent,
the betrayer goes free while the one who remains silent gets a one-year
sentence. If both remain silent, they will each get a one-month
sentence. If both decide to testify against the other, each will get a
three-month sentence. Even though both will be better off if they stay
silent, the “Nash equilibrium” is that both men will testify against each other. This is because from the perspective of each prisoner, regardless of what the other person does, he can be better off by betraying...

The prisoner’s dilemma problem can help us better understand the
dynamics of the eurozone crisis, in our view. Below (Table 1), we
present a highly abstract, stylized form of the game that Germany and Greece have been playing for the last two years.
Greece is given two options: austerity or no austerity. Germany also
has two options: Eurobonds or no Eurobonds. For each of the four
possible outcomes, we assign a certain payoff for each country that is
meant to be illustrative, but captures the essence of the different
political/economic considerations of the two countries.

 

As the payoffs in Table 1 imply, both countries would fare
better if they choose to cooperate (Greece agreeing to austerity while
Germany agreeing to Eurobonds) than if they do not cooperate (no
austerity and no Eurobonds)
. However, Greece would be even
better off if it chooses no austerity but Germany agrees to Eurobonds.
Similarly, the best outcome for Germany is that it opts for no Eurobonds
but Greece chooses austerity. We assume that neither country knows what
the other country is going to do before it has to decide on a course of
action…

It is easy to see that the Nash equilibrium is no austerity and no Eurobonds (uncooperative equilibrium).
This is because from the point of view of Greece, regardless of what
Germany chooses, it will be better off if it opts for no austerity.
Similarly, from the point of view of Germany, regardless of what Greece
does, it will be better off if it chooses no Eurobonds. As with the
Prisoner’s Dilemma, no austerity and no Eurobonds can be shown to be the
Nash equilibrium (using backward induction) even if we were to allow
for the game to be played repeatedly.

In our view, the fact that the dominant strategy for both
countries is not to cooperate is why more than two years into the crisis
Greece is not closer to implementing a credible reform program and
Germany is not any closer to agreeing to Eurobonds

The obstacle is that neither side is able to make a credible pre-commitment to doing the “right thing,” to the extent that there is no enforcement mechanism to ensure that each country lives up to its promises.

The lack of an enforcement mechanism is why the
Germans are demanding that fiscal union will have to precede Eurobonds.
Fiscal union, by taking fiscal policy out of the hands of the national
governments, solves the pre-commitment problem. However, very few
eurozone countries are willing to entertain the notion of giving up
their independent fiscal policy, especially given that, as members of
the monetary union, they do not have recourse to an independent monetary
policy.

The economics of voluntary exit

If the eurozone is no closer to a fiscal union and Eurobonds, we need to consider other potential outcomes of the crisis.
Much has been said about involuntary exit from the eurozone , but what
about the chances of a voluntary exit, meaning a country (or multiple
countries) opting to call it quits on its (their) own accord?

A decision to stay or exit should be dictated by a cost and benefit
analysis. What are some of the considerations that should go into such
an analysis? In our view, there are four key questions that will have to be answered before any such decision can be made:

  • What are the chances for an orderly exit?
  • What is the impact on growth following an exit?
  • What is the impact on borrowing costs following an exit?
  • What is the impact on the country’s balance sheet following an exit?

These are all detailed in the paper below…

Final scores

To reach a final tally of the relative incentives that different
countries are facing to voluntarily exit the euro, we add up the
rankings across the above four criteria. For simplicity, we attach the
same weight to each of our four sets of considerations. The results are
in Table 6.
Two very interesting results emerge:

  • Even though much of the market focus on exit risk has been on Greece, Italy and Ireland have the highest relative incentive to voluntarily exit the euro,
    by our analysis. In the case of Italy, it faces a relatively higher
    chance of achieving an orderly exit and it stands to benefit
    significantly from competitive gains, growth gains and even balance
    sheet gains. No wonder former Prime Minister Berlusconi has been
    recently quoted as saying that leaving the euro is not a “blasphemy.”
    Among the peripheral countries, Spain appears to have the lowest
    relative incentive to leave.
  • While Germany is the country most likely to achieve an
    orderly exit from the Euro, it also has the lowest incentive of any
    country to leave
    , in our view. It would suffer from lower
    growth, possibly higher borrowing costs, and negative balance sheet
    effect. Austria, Finland and Belgium don’t have strong incentive to
    leave, either.

 

Can Germany “bribe” Italy to stay?

What we have established in the previous section is that the incentive to leave the euro varies from country to country. Among the major economies, we believe Italy stands the most to gain from exiting, whereas Germany has the most to lose from exiting.
We would argue for the same reason that Germany would also lose from
the exit of other countries. (Say Italy leaves the euro but Germany
stays. German holdings of Italian liabilities would fall in value,
German exports to Italy would suffer and German companies would now face
more competitive Italian manufacturing firms.) Does this mean
that Germany would be willing to pay a price for Italy (as it has for
Greece, Ireland, and Portugal) to stay in the euro?

Yes, but we would argue that this strategy is not a stable Nash equilibrium. To illustrate this, think of the following game…

What is the Nash equilibrium of this game?

We can use backward induction to solve the game. In period 3, Italy
is clearly better off exiting than staying (after Germany has already
paid the “bribe”), as the payoff for Italy in outcome 4 is inferior to
the payoff in outcome 3. If we can see this, so can Germany in period 2.
Whether it pays or not, Italy will exit in the following period.
Therefore, Germany is better off by not paying. Now in period 1, Italy
can make the informed calculation that Germany will not pay. This means
that Italy has an incentive to exit in period 1. The bottom line
is that the only stable equilibrium of this game is that Italy exits
the euro and, more importantly, it exits already in period 1.

This game and the
analysis in the previous section would suggest that we should not expect
what has already happened between Germany and Greece during the
eurozone crisis to play out the same way for Italy if the crisis
spreads.
Italy has more incentives than Greece to
voluntarily exit the eurozone, in our view, while it will be more
expensive for Germany to keep Italy in the eurozone. This means that
Italy could be even more reluctant than Greece to accept tough
conditionalities for staying. If our inference turns out to be correct, this could have serious negative implications for markets in the months ahead.

Only a weak EUR can save the EUR

Despite the depreciation of the euro in the last three years, its
trade weighted index is in the middle of its range of the last 30 years,
and still nearly 10% stronger than where it was in 2000. Against the
USD, it is still some 45% stronger than its low in November 2000.

Our analysis makes it very clear that a much weaker EUR may help save
the EUR in the end. For one thing, a much weaker EUR would
significantly reduce the incentive of any country to exit. For example, a
20% depreciation of the EUR against the USD would reduce by nearly half
the loss of competitiveness of Italy to the US since the inception of
the EUR (Chart 6).

Our analysis above
suggests that the eurozone is now facing two paths – break up or accept a
much weaker EUR. To the extent that the first path is likely to be also
associated with a weaker EUR (at least in the transition), it seems
that further depreciation of the EUR is inevitable.

Source: BofAML

MUST READ!

Full document here – pdf

μέσω For Italy, It Is Game Theory Over | ZeroHedge.

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ΠΕΝΤΕ ΤΡΑΠΕΖΙΤΕΣ (BANKSTERS) ΣΥΝΕΛΗΦΘΗΣΑΝ ΚΑΙ ΤΟΥΣ ΑΠΑΓΓΕΛΘΗΚΑΝ ΚΑΤΗΓΟΡΙΕΣ ΓΙΑ ΑΠΑΤΗ

Posted by satyrikon στο 25 Ιουλίου, 2012

While many search the web for evidence of the arrests of members of the criminal cabal, one such story has surely broken through the cabal imposed media blackout.

Three of Ireland’s leading bank executives, former Anglo-Irish Bank chief Sean Fitzpatrick, ex-Finance Director Willie McAteer, and managing director for Ireland Pat Whelan were arrested on Tuesday, 7/24/12, for their crimes that led to Ireland’s largest ever bank failure.

Three others, who happen to be among Ireland’s wealthiest residents, were also implicated for their roles in these crimes.
In other news, former International Monetary Fund and Bankia chief Rodrigo Rato was arrested on 7/6/12 and charged with criminal fraud for his role in the bankruptcy of Bankia, Spain’s 3rd largest banking institution, which is at the center of the country’s economic crash and occupy movement which was motivated, in part, after Bankia, which was only in business less than two years, received a bailout from taxpayers of over 19 Billion Euros.
On the Asian front, the elder brother of South Korean president Lee Myung-Buk has been arrested on corruption charges, leading to a possible regime change as elections for the country are later this year.

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The Definitive Lesson In «New Normal» European Geography | ZeroHedge

Posted by satyrikon στο 14 Ιουνίου, 2012

For your definitive documented «X is not Y» atlasing needs.

1. “Spain is not Greece.”

Elena Salgado, Spanish Finance minister, Feb. 2010

2. “Portugal is not Greece.”

The Economist, 22nd April 2010.

3. “Ireland is not in ‘Greek Territory.’”

Irish Finance Minister Brian Lenihan.

4. “Greece is not Ireland.”

George Papaconstantinou, Greek Finance minister, 8th November, 2010.

5. “Spain is neither Ireland nor Portugal.”

Elena Salgado, Spanish Finance minister, 16 November 2010.

6. “Neither Spain nor Portugal is Ireland.”

Angel Gurria, Secretary-general OECD, 18th November, 2010.

7. «Spain is not Uganda»

Rajoy to Guindos… Last weekend!

8. «Italy is not Spain»

Ed Parker, Fitch MD, 12 June 201

via The Definitive Lesson In «New Normal» European Geography | ZeroHedge.

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Syriza Takes Advantage Of Spanish Bailout To Boost Its Winning Odds | ZeroHedge

Posted by satyrikon στο 11 Ιουνίου, 2012

On Saturday, when we discussed the impact of the Spanish bailout for other European countries, focusing on Ireland which had promptly requested a renegotiation of its own terms to match those of Spain, we noted that «Syriza’s Tsipras should send a bottle of the finest champagne to de Guindos – he just won him the election.» It appears that the leader of the Greek anti-bailout party wasted no time to capitalize precisely on just this.

From the FT:

Alexis Tsipras, leader of Greece’s leftwing Syriza coalition, seized on news of the Spanish bailout to bolster his position ahead of next week’s crucial general election, which may determine whether the country stays in the euro.

“The developments in Spain confirm the position we adopted from the start – that the crisis is a pan-European problem, and the way it has been handled so far has been socially catastrophic and completely ineffectual,” Mr Tsipras, who opposes the bailouts, told a newspaper.

Antonis Samaras, the pro-bailout conservative leader, said the Spanish bailout terms showed “the benefits of taking the road of responsibility”.

What we wonder is why did Europe cave to the Spanish demands before the Greek elections. Because, paradoxically, by yielding to a bailout plan, which at least superficially has been painted as one without conditions, it just cemented Syriza’s entire electoral platform as having absolute validity.

Then again, on the insolvent continent, nothing really surprises us any more.

via Syriza Takes Advantage Of Spanish Bailout To Boost Its Winning Odds | ZeroHedge.

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Spain IS Greece After All: Here Are The Main Outstanding Items Following The Spanish Bailout

Posted by satyrikon στο 9 Ιουνίου, 2012

Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/09/2012

After two years of denials, we finally have the right answer: Spain IS Greece. Only much bigger. So now that the European bailout has moved from Greece, Ireland and Portugal on to the big one, Spain, here are the key outstanding questions.

1. Where will the money come from?

De Guindos, Schauble and the Eurogroup, all announced that the sole source of cash would be the ESM and/or the EFSF. The problem with this is that the ESM has yet to be ratified by Germany, whose parliament said previously it is sternly against allowing the ESM to fund a direct bank bailout, something which just happened. Thus, the successful German ESM ratification vote, whenever it comes, and which previously was taken for granted, now appears to be far more questionable.

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ZeroHedge | On a long enough timeline the survival rate for everyone drops to zero

Posted by satyrikon στο 9 Ιουνίου, 2012

The wind picked up across the plains, the windmill began to turn and “The Ingenious Gentleman Don Quixote of La Mancha” rode out once more to do battle. The ever faithful Sancho Panza, not wishing to be left behind, was in attendance and the windmills were now the banks and the regional debt of the country. You see, the Troubadour, Mariano Rajoy, does not wish the country to take any responsibility. It is to be the banks, not to injure the pride of the nation, that are the culprits and the banks, run by the empanada consortium, who are to be blamed. The IMF has released a statement claiming the banks need about $46bn which is the typical posture of the IMF these days; underestimating liabilities and then finding that more money is needed later; which they already knew of course. “Under estimate the liabilities and over estimate the assets” is the mantra sung at the IMF these days at the morning prayers as their credibility is as certain as the stature of the giants fought by Don Quixote.

via ZeroHedge | On a long enough timeline the survival rate for everyone drops to zero.

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The Reign In Spain Is Over | ZeroHedge

Posted by satyrikon στο 5 Ιουνίου, 2012

The Reign In Spain Is Over

From Mark Grant, author of Out of the Box

 

Spain Capitulates

Spain has now officially asked the European Union for aid for its banks. The markets seem to be responding as if the bank issue is isolated. It is not isolated. We are following the same schematic as we did with Ireland; first it was the banks and then it was the country and then the “Men in Black” showed up to take over. Spain says it is a 50 billion Euro problem and the reality is probably more like a 400 billion Euro problem. There is all kinds of cross lending between the banks in Spain and while Spain’s largest two banks have tried everything they could to isolate themselves; I predict there will be no escape for anyone. Now that Spain has asked for a bailout of their banks the European auditors will show up and I would bet large money that the values of many loans and the value of Real Estate and the securitizations tied to it will be found to have been vastly overstated. Then it will be the regional governments and their debts and the house of cards will implode. The Spanish Finance Minister kicked off the first domino this morning and we can all just stand by now and watch the rest fall.

Bear in mind that the current Stabilization Fund in Europe, not the one that is not even yet in existence, has nowhere near the capital to shore up the Spanish banks much less the country. The G-7 is having an emergency meeting about Spain this morning and while there is a lull presently; it will not last. The periphery nations, led by Spain, are pushing on Germany and the funding nations to step-in but the cost will be very high and a huge loss of sovereignty. I doubt if many in Europe understand the price that will be extracted which will be the EU taking over Spain’s financial system, taxes and social services so that Brussels/Berlin will control the country. Spain arrived at the precipice, as I have predicted many times and this morning; they have fallen over the edge.

So long and thanks for all the sardines!

Sancho is no longer fighting with windmills this morning. Notions of some charming book or a small foray into the countryside have been replaced by a much more serious confrontation where Germany will demand vengeance for the irresponsible behavior of Spain. Make no mistake here, don’t get fooled again; Spain is going to come under the heel the jackboot and applying what motives you may to Germany will make little difference in the end. The current government of Spain will no longer be in control. First it will be the banks and then the regional debt and, recognizing the inevitable yet or not; the end-game began this morning. Spain is done!

I’ll be seeing you
In all the old familiar places
That this heart of mine embraces
All day through

 

In that small cafe
The park across the way
The children’s carousel
The chestnut tree
The wishing well 

 

                           -I’ll be Seeing You

via The Reign In Spain Is Over | ZeroHedge.

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Η ΤΡΙΜΕΡΗΣ ΕΠΙΤΡΟΠΗ(THE TRILATELAR COMMISSION) ΘΕΛΕΙ ΠΟΛΕΜΟ ΜΕ ΤΟ ΙΡΑΝ

Posted by satyrikon στο 19 Μαΐου, 2010

TC member unwittingly tells We Are Change activist of plans for world government

Trilateral Commission Wants War With Iran 140510top

Paul Joseph Watson
Prison Planet.com
Friday, May 14, 2010

Trilateral Commission member Mikhail Slobodovsici, a chief adviser to the Russian leadership, unwittingly provided a revealing insight into the plans of the global elite during the group’s recent meeting in Dublin Ireland, when he mistakenly told a We Are Change Ireland activist he thought was a fellow TC member that the globalists are planning a war with Iran.

According to Jim Tucker’s fascinating report on the story, Slobodovsici also let slip to We Are Change Ireland’s Alan Keenan that the Trilateralists and their BIlderberg counterparts are intent on exploiting the economic crisis to finalize plans for a world government, but that this agenda is being severely hampered by so-called “nationalists” who are becoming increasingly aware of the impact that global government will have on their freedom and standards of living.

“We are deciding the future of the world,” Slobodovsici told Keenan. “We need a world government,” he said, but, referring to Iran, said “we need to get rid of them.”

“Suddenly, Slobodovsici noticed that Keenan’s nametag was different from the TC label and said: “I can’t talk—we operate under Chatham House rules,” reports Tucker.

Slobodovsici’s position on Iran is both alarming and surprising in equal measure, given that Russia has been generally supportive of Iran’s right to develop a peaceful nuclear fuel program and has directly helped build reactors.

Tucker also reveals that Trilateralists are crestfallen at how their plans for global government and centralization of power are being so fiercely resisted.

“It gets worse every year, not better,” one said. “Why do we even bother to meet anymore?”

“We can’t simply give up and quit,” another responded. “Bilderberg expects us to have a plan outlined.”

The fact that the elite had planned to have their world government fully operational by 2000 and are ten years overdue has been much cause for concern amongst Trilateralists, reports Tucker.

“TC boys are upset they were unable to exploit the economic crisis they helped generate by creating a world “treasury department” under the UN. They blame “rising nationalism” and ask “how those people knew about this,” according to witnesses inside the TC hotel.”

The continuing collapse of the euro threatens to derail the entire march towards global governance, a problem the elitists want to address by cranking up the printing presses in an effort to pour more money into failing states like Greece, Portugal and Spain.

The fact that a We Are Change Ireland activist was able to fool a Trilateral Commission member into spilling the beans on the globalists’ agenda is astounding. As was underscored recently by members of the Sovereign Independent who confronted David Rockefeller during the same meeting in Dublin, Trlaterals do not enjoy the same intense security that is afforded to the Bilderberg Group during their annual confab.

Bilderberg are set to convene at the Hotel Dolce Sitges near Barcelona Spain from June 4-7 for their annual meeting at which they will cover similar ground to the issues that were up for debate at the Trilateral conference in Dublin.

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Η ΕΥΡΩΠΑΙΚΗ ΕΝΩΣΗ ΤΟΥ «ΜΑΥΡΟΥ ΧΡΗΜΑΤΟΣ»

Posted by satyrikon στο 17 Ιουλίου, 2008

Η ΕΥΡΩΠΑΙΚΗ ΕΠΙΤΡΟΠΗ ΑΠΕΙΛΕΙ ΜΕ ΜΕΤΡΑ

15 ΧΩΡΕΣ ΤΗΣ ΕΥΡΩΠΑΙΚΗΣ ΕΝΩΣΗΣ-ΟΧΙ ΟΤΙ ΚΑΙ ΟΙ ΑΛΛΕΣ ΕΙΝΑΙ ΠΑΡΘΕΝΕΣ- ΓΙΑ ΤΟ ΜΑΥΡΟ ΧΡΗΜΑ.

European Commission Warns 15 Members

On Money-Launder Rules

BRUSSELS (AFP)–The European Commission is warning 15 member states that they face legal action for failing to adopt E.U. anti-money laundering rules into national law as part of the fight against terrorism.

Internal Market Commissioner Charlie McCreevy raised the warning in a letter to Austria, Belgium, Czech Republic, Germany, France, Greece, Ireland, Latvia, Luxembourg, Malta, Netherlands, Poland, Slovakia, Sweden and Spain, a spokesman said.

Η ΣΥΝΕΧΕΙΑ ΕΔΩ

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