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EU President Herman Van Rompuy will also make a push for eurozone leaders to give an even clearer sign they will fund a second rescue package for Greece as long as Greece manages to push through the new austerity measures in a June 28 vote. The International Monetary Fund, which has provided about one-third of the European bailouts, has made continued financing for Greece a precondition to paying out its share of a euro12 billion ($17 billion) installment of Greece's first rescue package. Despite all these efforts, however, many financial experts believe that Greece's debt burden is too great in the long term and the country is heading for an eventual default. The divisions among EU countries are reaching beyond the problems of Greece. Another key item planned for the summit
-- the formal appointment of Mario Draghi as the new president of the ECB -- may be put off as fellow Italian executive board member Lorenzo Bini Smaghi has so far refused to leave his post. The French, who with the departure of current ECB President Jean-Claude Trichet on Oct. 31 would not have a representative on the board, will only support Draghi if a Frenchman or a woman takes over Smaghi's spot. European finance ministers, the European Parliament and the board of the ECB have already backed Draghi, but without the formal approval of the leaders his appointment will not be valid.
[Associated
Press;
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