Greece's new government headed for a showdown with sceptical European partners today as it took its demands to renegotiate its huge bailout to crunch talks in Brussels.
The emergency meeting of eurozone finance ministers promises to be bruising, with Greek demands for a cash lifeline and a relaxation of austerity facing resistance from Germany in particular.
Markets worldwide are spooked by the renewed threat of Greece crashing out of the euro, with the country's massive EU-IMF bailout set to expire at the end of February, leaving it at the risk of a default.
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"I want to repeat today, no matter how much (German Finance Minister Wolfgang) Schaeuble asks it, we are not going to ask to extend the bailout," left-wing Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras told lawmakers yesterday before his government won a confidence vote.
The new government is riding a wave of popularity in Greece, emboldened by the 40-year-old premier's defiance of Germany and austerity, which Tsipras has tempered with pledges to keep Greece in the eurozone.
But Greece has also ramped up threats to look to Russia or China for help, further raising the stakes for European unity as it wrestles with economic stagnation and the crisis in Ukraine.
Tsipras has been invited to Beijing to meet his Chinese counterpart counterpart Li Keqiang, a government source said Wednesday, while the new Greek foreign minister was expected later in Moscow.
Defence Minister Panos Kammenos on Tuesday said Athens could look for a "plan B" if the EU fails to help, which could involve Washington, Beijing or Moscow.