The plan is a far cry from the inflamed rhetoric, which Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras deployed in parliament just two days ago. Instead of pouring universal scorn on the Eurozone bailout programme, as he did during the campaign that put his Syriza movement in power, the Tsipras government now seems ready to accept part of it. Even a large part, judging by news it would accept about 70 per cent of the bailout plan monitored by the infamous troika - the European Commission, the International Monetary Fund and the European Central Bank.
It is unclear how such metrics can be applied to a complex, granular programme. But this is at least an indication that, as Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis put it, Athens doesn't want to "tear up the memorandum."
However, Greece is also pushing demands in line with Syriza's programme. It wants to run a smaller primary budget surplus, agree a debt swap with the country's creditors, and confirm measures already taken to deal with the "humanitarian crisis" brought upon by the austerity programme.
Greece's European partners will try to assess this week whether Tsipras is serious enough to do business with. Sceptics, led by Germany, will want to know exactly how the primary surplus will be maintained if Athens rolls back state-sector reforms for "humanitarian" reasons. And Berlin will want to make sure that any debt swap deal is cosmetically designed to avoid uproar in the German parliament.
Tsipras will have to make concessions if he wants his country and his banks to be funded beyond the official end of the current bailout at the close of the month. The problem is, he will then have to explain to Greeks how that squares with the platform on which he was elected.
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