As stated by the deputy national security adviser, Ben Rhodes, told the press, the crisis will be one of the matters addressed in his meeting Tuesday with the Brazilian president, Dilma Roussef, and Wednesday with the French head of state, Nicolas Sarkozy, British Prime Minister, David Cameron, and the new Japanese prime minister, Yoshihiko Noda.
These bilateral meetings will occur after a meeting of finance ministers of the Ecofin in Wroclaw (Poland), which played an unusual Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner, and ended without removing the divisions that impede progress in the program of aid to Greece, the big problem in the crisis immediately.
The eurozone ignored U.S. pressure for the EU to encourage enhance the economy and the bailout fund and finance ministers did not use the meeting to advance solutions to the crisis and proceed to the second bailout of Greece, valued at 160,000 million euros. This has generated sharp criticism from U.S., which calls for more spending to revive the economy rather than cuts.
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