Credit crunch puts new strains on Sarkozy-Merkel ties
By Francois Murphy and Kerstin Gehmlich - Analysis
PARIS/BERLIN (Reuters) - French President Nicolas Sarkozy and German Chancellor Angela Merkel have bickered over the euro, argued about a Mediterranean union and now the global financial crisis is reopening old wounds between them.
There had been few public spats since France took over the European Union presidency in July, and they cooperated well over Sarkozy's first big test at the EU's helm, Russia's brief war with Georgia in August.
But now the pair have clashed over how to deal with the credit crisis, and Europe's traditional "Franco-German motor" seems to be sputtering just when leaders across the 27-nation bloc are calling for united action to stop the rot.
"The relationship between the two leaders is not spontaneously good. They are making enormous efforts on both sides but it is a difficult relationship," said Dominique Moisi, special adviser to the French think-tank IFRI.
Sarkozy and Merkel are due to hold a regular Franco-German meeting in late French President Charles de Gaulle's home town on Saturday, days before a summit of EU leaders that will examine overhauling the Union's financial regulation.
Germans were furious last week when Economy Minister Christine Lagarde made public a French proposal to establish an EU-wide rescue fund to help troubled banks.
Government sources say senior officials in the German Finance Ministry and Chancellery had made clear their opposition to the fund, which was to total 300 billion euros ($411.7 billion), in private talks with French officials.
When Lagarde went ahead anyway and announced the French plans in an interview with German newspaper Handelsblatt three days before a Paris summit of European G8 leaders, irate German Finance Minister Peer Steinbrueck moved swiftly to torpedo it. Continued...



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