US Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner told the IMF that 'decisions as to how to conclusively address the region's problems cannot wait' Photo: REUTERS
Europe Must Now Grasp Its Chance To Turn Off The Doomsday Device -- Jeremy Warner
The G20’s 'grand plan’ discussed in Washington is far from perfect – but it could buy enough time to defuse the euro crisis.
Benjamin Franklin’s famous remark that “we must indeed all hang together, or, most assuredly, we shall all hang separately” was much in use among G20 finance ministers last week, meeting in Washington to address the crisis facing the eurozone.
There was always a delicious ambiguity about this observation, which is even more apparent when applied to the travails of the single currency. Franklin could have meant that it is better to act together in pursuit of salvation than to face the noose alone – or simply that, if you’re going to die anyway, it’s nice to have some company on the gallows.
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Commentaries, Opinions, And Editorials
IMF lax on Europe? Past rescue efforts elsewhere hit private investors harder -- Howard Schneider, Washington Post
Germany Votes Yes, But the Euro Crisis Is Far From Over -- Leo Cendrowicz, Time
European debt crisis: Seven basics you need to know -- Mark Trumbull, Christian Science Monitor
Aqim escalates the violence in Algeria – helped by Libya's war -- Simon Tisdall, The Guardian
A reporter in Libya wonders about lessons of war -- David Enders, McClatchy News
Why Europe is pushing for sanctions on Syria – not intervention -- Scott Peterson, Christian Science Monitor
The Arab Spring and Syria's long winter -- Fehmy Saddy, Al Jazeera
America loses patience with Pakistan. Relations between the US and Pakistan have reached a breaking point. -- Shashank Joshi, The Telegraph
Trapped in Guantanamo -- Joseph Margulies, L.A. Times
Why Fewer Young American Jews Share Their Parents' View of Israel -- Dana Goldstein, Time
America’s Foreign Policy Fiasco -- Patrick Seale, The Diplomat
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