Germany and Greece need a mediator | Michael Scaturro
Political Berlin feels emotional right now. A high-level German politician put it this way to me recently: "It's like a whole hysteria going on here. The Berlin political world is emotional all the time. It has to stop, but I don't know how. The anger is on the left, it's on the right." The historian Jacob Soll touched on this outpouring of emotion as it relates to Greece in a column in the New York Times last week, and his conclusion is that Germans must regain their cool if they want to lead Europe.
He is right, but he is skipping a step. Germans cannot regain their cool until they reduce the outrage they feel towards Greece, which they perceive as the guilty partner in their eurozone marriage. To do this, both nations must engage an impartial, outside mediator to help them mitigate the outrage they feel towards each other. In a structured, therapy-like setting, relevant policymakers from both sides would then finally be able to sit together and create a shared vision to wrest Greece from its economic depression.
Related: Why is Germany so tough on Greece? Look back 25 years | Dirk Laabs
An impartial mediating team could help treat the emotion and lower the outrage
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