Cowboy,,, I may have missed something?
I already mentioned that the dollar is in fierce battle with the Euro. We don't want competition for status as the reserve currency. The U.S. has just fired a full broadside at the Euro and the EMU.
http://blogs.telegraph.co.uk/finance/am ... or-europe/
The European banks have set things up so that they don't lose anything. The possible new plan has a different outcome.
"In Greece’s case it would require a haircut of 50 per cent or so for foolhardy creditors, ie your bank and mine, your pension fund and mine. "
This is a huge departure from the normal screwing that the populace generally receives. This can be expected to shaft the banks. The EMU has also gone to the extraordinary action of forbidding "naked shorting" on the 10 most important financial institutions. This is a tacit admission that the banks are toast and need protection.
Greece won't be saved. Spain is more defensable.
The big flaw in the Eurozone was that it created a unified currency without creating a mechanism for enforcing monetary policy. It was just " A bridge too far,,, too soon. One only needs to look at history to see why.
", according to the economists Carmen Reinhart and Kenneth Rogoff.
"Greece has defaulted or rescheduled its debt five times since gaining independence in 1829, the economists wrote in their paper 'This Time Is Different,' published in 2008 and recently expanded into a book. Spain has the lead in Europe at 13 times since 1476. Germany and France have both done it 8 times, while the UK has never done it since William the Conqueror invaded in 1066.
"Greece has existed in a 'perpetual state of default' since its independence," the Journal concludes, "having spent 50.6% of those years in default or rescheduling, easily tops in Europe. Russia is next highest, with 39.1% of years spent as a bad debtor after defaulting or rescheduling five times.""
From The Daily Reckoning;
"In a worst-case scenario, the ECB will exhaust its cash, credit and credibility trying to save Greece...and will destroy the euro in the process. Best case, the "fix" will persuade a few Wall Street strategists that the "worst of the euro crisis is over" and will suck a few more suckers into the European sovereign debt markets before the situation gets REALLY ugly.
And it will get ugly...one way or another."
The other issue is that the BIS seems to be at war with the IMF for global dominance. There are going to be some big casualties.

I don't post things because I believe that they are the absolute truth. I post them because I believe that they should be considered.