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How The Berlin Wall Came To Be Built

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 08 November 2014 | 22.57

By Patrick Major, Professor of Modern History, Reading University

The Berlin Wall was the Cold War made concrete.

It went up during one of its frostiest flashpoints; it came down as the eastern bloc unravelled, closely followed by the Soviet Union itself two years later.

It was built right on the East-West fault-line created by World War Two. (The bunker garden where Hitler was cremated in 1945 became part of no-man's land.) Berlin had always been a Cold War anomaly, located 100 miles behind the Iron Curtain.

Its three internationally-agreed western sectors, belonging to America, Britain and France, became a refuge for millions of East Germans fleeing in the 1950s.

The decision to build the wall in August 1961 was a communist act of desperation to prevent itself from bleeding dry.

Literally overnight, the Berlin border was closed, and gradually reinforced with breeze blocks and barbed wire.

Video: Gorbachev's Interpreter On Wall

Soon, the first fatal shooting had occurred, when a young man was machine-gunned swimming a canal by the Reichstag - 135 other victims followed over the next 28 years.

"The West is doing NOTHING!" ran Bildzeitung's headline.

Although western leaders condemned the "Wall of Shame", they did not act. There were good reasons. The wall was founded on nuclear stalemate.

In October 1961, the Soviets detonated a 50-megaton Tsar Bomba which mushroomed more than 50 kilometres high (31 miles).

The message was not lost on US President John Kennedy who may not have liked the wall, but thought it "a hell of a lot better than a war".

Video: Sound And Vision: Berlin Wall Fall

This stark reality forced a rethink among some western leaders.

Willy Brandt, social democratic mayor of West Berlin in '61, later Federal chancellor, was the architect of détente - or Ostpolitik - in the late 1960s.

Now the West de facto recognised the German Democratic Republic; in 1973 both Germanys joined the United Nations.

Ironically, it was this international "bringing in from the cold" that undermined the wall in the 1980s.

The date of 9 November, 1989, when thousands thronged the checkpoints and the wall "fell", seemed like another overnight sensation.

Video: Sky Reports The Fall Of Berlin Wall

But there was a long fuse.

East Germany was trapped between Gorbachev's glasnost in the East and the West German Wirtschaftswunder in the West. In return for aid, both demanded human rights reforms which fuelled the mass demonstrations in the hot autumn of 1989.

Nor should we forget that the fall of the wall was a symptom, not a cause, of the collapse of communism. If the writing was on the wall, it was in Polish and spelled "Solidarity", the path-breaking anti-communist movement under Lech Walesa, or in Hungary, where the first McDonald's behind the Iron Curtain had opened in 1988.

The fall of the wall completely altered the geo-political landscape. Even doubters such as Mrs Thatcher could not oppose German reunification in 1990.

By 1994, Russia had left eastern Germany, and NATO was soon on her doorstep. The West had to come to terms with the realities of freedom of movement which for so long had been largely Cold War rhetoric. And the world had learnt about revolution by "people power".

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  1. Gallery: 25 Years Since The Berlin Wall Fell

    West Berlin policemen and East German Volkspolizei face each other across the border in Berlin, circa 1955

1961: Soldiers build the Berlin Wall, as instructed by the East German authorities, in order to strengthen the existing barriers dividing East and West Berlin

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Young Woman's Berlin Wall Diary Revealed

Young Woman's Berlin Wall Diary Revealed

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Video: Remembered: The Day The Wall Fell

Anke Domscheit Berg saw a world of opportunity open when the Berlin Wall fell. In these extracts from her diary 25 years ago, when she was 21, she describes the emotional celebrations that took place across the city.

9 November, 1989

Hours ago, the news came in - the border of the German Democratic Republic has been opened.

Unbelievable. Every hour, 3,500 people are leaving the country. The Democratic Awakening (a political group formed in October 1989) stood in front of the crossing point and tried to persuade people to stay. To so many people, everything is falling apart. There are resignations all the time; everything has been turned upside down.

To America in the summer? Can I pay for the ticket? Visiting France? The Mediterranean Sea, Holland, Tunisia, Luanda? How can I have a holiday, where can I find the money? I am longing for everywhere, only to return.

Anke.

13 November, 1989

My friend walks into the bathroom and beams. He asks: "What do you think about our victory?"

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  1. Gallery: 25 Years Since The Berlin Wall Fell

    West Berlin policemen and East German Volkspolizei face each other across the border in Berlin, circa 1955

1961: Soldiers build the Berlin Wall, as instructed by the East German authorities, in order to strengthen the existing barriers dividing East and West Berlin

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Border guards on opposite sides of the wall, viewed from the western side

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Families and friends, once neighbours, wave across to each other over the wall

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Young Woman's Berlin Wall Diary Revealed

We use cookies to give you the best experience. If you do nothing we'll assume that it's ok.

Video: Remembered: The Day The Wall Fell

Anke Domscheit Berg saw a world of opportunity open when the Berlin Wall fell. In these extracts from her diary 25 years ago, when she was 21, she describes the emotional celebrations that took place across the city.

9 November, 1989

Hours ago, the news came in - the border of the German Democratic Republic has been opened.

Unbelievable. Every hour, 3,500 people are leaving the country. The Democratic Awakening (a political group formed in October 1989) stood in front of the crossing point and tried to persuade people to stay. To so many people, everything is falling apart. There are resignations all the time; everything has been turned upside down.

To America in the summer? Can I pay for the ticket? Visiting France? The Mediterranean Sea, Holland, Tunisia, Luanda? How can I have a holiday, where can I find the money? I am longing for everywhere, only to return.

Anke.

13 November, 1989

My friend walks into the bathroom and beams. He asks: "What do you think about our victory?"

1/55

  1. Gallery: 25 Years Since The Berlin Wall Fell

    West Berlin policemen and East German Volkspolizei face each other across the border in Berlin, circa 1955

1961: Soldiers build the Berlin Wall, as instructed by the East German authorities, in order to strengthen the existing barriers dividing East and West Berlin

]]>

Border guards on opposite sides of the wall, viewed from the western side

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Families and friends, once neighbours, wave across to each other over the wall

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Berlin Wall Fall: Millions To Party Like It's 1989

Berlin Wall Fall: Millions To Party Like It's 1989

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  1. Gallery: Berlin Wall Fall 25th Anniversary

    The installation 'Lichtgrenze' (Border of Light) along a former Berlin Wall location is illuminated next to the Brandenburg Gate in Berlin.

People pass by a light installation of balloons tethered to lamps illuminating the course of the Berlin Wall

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Former Soviet Leader Mikhail Gorbachev, the eighth and last leader of the Soviet Union (C), places his hands in wet cement attached to a section of the former Berlin Wall.

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An impression of the hand of former Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev is seen in cement.

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Berlin Wall Fall: Millions To Party Like It's 1989

We use cookies to give you the best experience. If you do nothing we'll assume that it's ok.

1/15

  1. Gallery: Berlin Wall Fall 25th Anniversary

    The installation 'Lichtgrenze' (Border of Light) along a former Berlin Wall location is illuminated next to the Brandenburg Gate in Berlin.

People pass by a light installation of balloons tethered to lamps illuminating the course of the Berlin Wall

]]>

Former Soviet Leader Mikhail Gorbachev, the eighth and last leader of the Soviet Union (C), places his hands in wet cement attached to a section of the former Berlin Wall.

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An impression of the hand of former Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev is seen in cement.

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'Gang Massacred' Missing Mexico Students

'Gang Massacred' Missing Mexico Students

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Video: Mexico Murders Reconstruction

Three suspected gang members have confessed to murdering 43 missing students at a landfill site before burning them beyond recognition and dumping them in a river, Mexican authorities have said.

In a sombre and lengthy news conference detailing the investigation, Attorney General Jesus Murillo said the suspects, caught a week ago, set about removing all the evidence.

"They didn't just burn the bodies with their clothes, they also burned the clothes of those who participated. They tried to erase every possible trace."

Video of the suspects' alleged confessions and footage showing hundreds of charred fragments of bone and teeth fished from the river where the bodies were dumped was played during the news conference.

Mr Murillo said it would be very difficult to extract DNA to confirm that they are the remains of the students who went missing six weeks ago after clashing with police in Iguala in the southern state of Guerrero.

The government would continue to view the students as missing until their identities are confirmed, he added.

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  1. Gallery: Public Anger Continues Over Lack Of News On Students' Fate

    Protests have continued over the fate of 43 missing students despite the news three suspects claim to have killed them on behalf of a drug gang

The students, from a teaching college, went missing after a protest in Guerrero state

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'Gang Massacred' Missing Mexico Students

We use cookies to give you the best experience. If you do nothing we'll assume that it's ok.

Video: Mexico Murders Reconstruction

Three suspected gang members have confessed to murdering 43 missing students at a landfill site before burning them beyond recognition and dumping them in a river, Mexican authorities have said.

In a sombre and lengthy news conference detailing the investigation, Attorney General Jesus Murillo said the suspects, caught a week ago, set about removing all the evidence.

"They didn't just burn the bodies with their clothes, they also burned the clothes of those who participated. They tried to erase every possible trace."

Video of the suspects' alleged confessions and footage showing hundreds of charred fragments of bone and teeth fished from the river where the bodies were dumped was played during the news conference.

Mr Murillo said it would be very difficult to extract DNA to confirm that they are the remains of the students who went missing six weeks ago after clashing with police in Iguala in the southern state of Guerrero.

The government would continue to view the students as missing until their identities are confirmed, he added.

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  1. Gallery: Public Anger Continues Over Lack Of News On Students' Fate

    Protests have continued over the fate of 43 missing students despite the news three suspects claim to have killed them on behalf of a drug gang

The students, from a teaching college, went missing after a protest in Guerrero state

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Top EU Diplomat Calls For Palestinian State

The European Union's new foreign affairs chief has called for the establishment of a Palestinian state, saying the world "cannot afford" another war in Gaza.

"We need a Palestinian state - that is the ultimate goal and this is the position of all the European Union," Federica Mogherini said during a visit to Gaza, devastated by its third conflict in six years.

Hamas and Israel fought a 50-day war in July and August which resulted in the deaths of 2,140 Palestinians and more than 70 Israelis.

Ms Mogherini, a former Italian foreign minister who took over from Britain's Baroness Catherine Ashton as the top EU diplomat on 1 November, was visiting against a backdrop of surging Israeli-Palestinian tensions in annexed east Jerusalem.

She voiced hope that Gaza would avoid another major conflict.

Video: Car Rams Into Crowd In Jerusalem

"It is not only the people of Gaza that can't afford having a fourth war, all the world cannot afford this," she said.

"We cannot just sit and wait. If we sit and wait it will go on for another 40 years. We have to have action now."

Palestinians are seeking to achieve statehood in Gaza and the Israeli-occupied West Bank with east Jerusalem as the capital.

Sweden last month became the first EU member in western Europe to officially recognise the state of Palestine.

Asked whether the EU might do the same, Ms Mogherini said that such a move was "not among the competences" of the 28-nation bloc.

Her visit came as a 22-year-old was shot dead by security forces In the village of Kfar Kana in northern Israel after intervening in the dawn arrest of one of his relatives, brandishing a knife, according to police.

Dozens of angry youths later erected barricades and set fire to tyres on the outskirts of the village as police deployed reinforcements.

The shooting followed another night of clashes in east Jerusalem with youths throwing stones and firecrackers against police who used rubber bullets, stun grenades and tear gas.

The spike in violence came after a driver rammed his car into a crowd of pedestrians in east Jerusalem on Wednesday before getting out and attacking people with a metal bar - killing a policeman and injuring nine other people before he was shot dead.

On Friday, a young Israeli also died of injuries sustained in the attack.

Speaking during her first official visit to Jerusalem, Ms Mogherini said there was a real "urgency" to pick up and advance the moribund peace process.

She also flagged up Israel's settlement building on lands the Palestinians want for a future state as an "obstacle" to a negotiated peace.

Shortly afterwards, the Italian politician met Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu who tersely dismissed all criticism of his settlement policy.

Ms Mogherini had been scheduled to meet Palestinian prime minister Rami Hamdallah in Gaza but he cancelled his trip after a series of bombs there on Friday hit the homes and cars of Fatah officials.


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US General Backs Israel's Tactics In Gaza War

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 07 November 2014 | 22.56

By Tom Rayner, Middle East Reporter

The most senior military official in the US has backed Israel's "knock on the roof" warning tactic, used during this summer's war in Gaza.

Head of the Joint Chiefs of Staff General Martin Dempsey said the technique of dropping a low-explosive shell on residential buildings as a warning prior to a full airstrike was an example of Israeli efforts to limit civilian casualties.

Made during a speaking event at the Carnegie Council for Ethics in International Affairs in New York, his comments follow Amnesty International's recent criticism of Israel's targeting of buildings in Gaza, which led to a significant number of civilian deaths.

General Dempsey said the underground tunnel networks used by militant groups in Gaza "caused the IDF some significant challenges", but said that in his opinion Israelis "did some extraordinary things to limit civilian casualties".

He also confirmed that the US had sent a team from the Defence Department to Israel in recent months to see what military lessons could be learned from Operation Protective Edge - the 50-day war in Gaza that raged in July and August this year.

UN figures suggest that of the 2,192 Palestinians killed, at least 1,523 were civilians.

In September, a report by Human Rights Watch described Israel's strikes around three United Nations schools in Gaza as "war crimes".

An Amnesty International report this week examined eight incidents in which a total of 111 people were killed, of whom at least 104 were civilians, including 66 children.

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  1. Gallery: Daily Life Among The Ruins Of Gaza

    A Palestinian woman hangs laundry on a rope outside her house that witnesses said was damaged by Israeli shelling during the most recent conflict between Israel and Hamas, in the east of Gaza City

Both Israeli and Palestinian leaders agreed in August to a ceasefire aimed at ending a weeks-old conflict which left more than 2,100 Palestinians and scores of Israelis dead. The first torrential downpour of an approaching winter has soaked the Gaza Strip, compounding the difficulties of thousands of Palestinians who scrambled to patch homes wrecked during the conflict

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Jihadis Join Cruises To Get To Syria And Iraq

Jihadis Join Cruises To Get To Syria And Iraq

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Would-be jihadis are booking tickets on cruise ships in an attempt to reach Syria and Iraq without attracting the attention of Turkish security forces.

Interpol has urged screening to be improved at all transport hubs - "airports and, more and more, cruise lines" - to stop fighters reaching Turkey, from where thousands of foreigners seeking to join Islamic State have already crossed into Syria.

The warning came as US aircraft bombed militants from the al-Qaeda-linked Nusra Front and the Ahrar al-Sham brigades in northern Syria.

US officials have said a Nusra Front cell is planning an attack against American interests. Initial reports suggested French-born bomb maker David Drugeon was among those hit and possibly killed in the airstrikes. 

Special teams have been set up at Turkish airports and bus stations to intercept foreign jihadis aiming to cross the long and porous border, according to local officials.

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  1. Gallery: The Battle Against IS In Syria

    Smoke rises above the Syrian Kurdish town of Kobani during fighting - seen from the Turkish border town of Suruc

Syrian rebel fighters fire a heavy machinegun against IS positions from a location west of Kobani. A rebel flag covers the front of the truck

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An EA-18G Growler electronic warfare plane launches from the Nimitz-class aircraft carrier USS Carl Vinson as part of the US operation against IS militants

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Jihadis Join Cruises To Get To Syria And Iraq

We use cookies to give you the best experience. If you do nothing we'll assume that it's ok.

Would-be jihadis are booking tickets on cruise ships in an attempt to reach Syria and Iraq without attracting the attention of Turkish security forces.

Interpol has urged screening to be improved at all transport hubs - "airports and, more and more, cruise lines" - to stop fighters reaching Turkey, from where thousands of foreigners seeking to join Islamic State have already crossed into Syria.

The warning came as US aircraft bombed militants from the al-Qaeda-linked Nusra Front and the Ahrar al-Sham brigades in northern Syria.

US officials have said a Nusra Front cell is planning an attack against American interests. Initial reports suggested French-born bomb maker David Drugeon was among those hit and possibly killed in the airstrikes. 

Special teams have been set up at Turkish airports and bus stations to intercept foreign jihadis aiming to cross the long and porous border, according to local officials.

1/15

  1. Gallery: The Battle Against IS In Syria

    Smoke rises above the Syrian Kurdish town of Kobani during fighting - seen from the Turkish border town of Suruc

Syrian rebel fighters fire a heavy machinegun against IS positions from a location west of Kobani. A rebel flag covers the front of the truck

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An EA-18G Growler electronic warfare plane launches from the Nimitz-class aircraft carrier USS Carl Vinson as part of the US operation against IS militants

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Uruguay President Offered $1m For VW Beetle

Uruguay President Offered $1m For VW Beetle

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Video: Uruguay President's Beetle For Sale

Uruguay's president has revealed he was offered a million dollars for his blue 1987 Volkswagen Beetle.

The car has become a symbol of Jose Mujica's austere lifestyle.

Mr Mujica, the man once nicknamed "the poorest president in the world", told a local publication that an Arab sheik had offered to pay $1m (£631,000) for the humble car.

The offer followed the Mexican ambassador to Uruguay's suggestion that Mr Mujica auction the Beetle in Mexico, predicting he could get 10 four-wheel-drive trucks for it.

Mr Mujica, who famously owns a three-legged dog, Manuela, said any money he received for the car would be donated to a programme he supports providing housing for the homeless.

The former leftist Tupamaro guerrilla leader said that if he bought trucks for it, they could go to Uruguay's public health office or his campaign workers.

The South American country's citizens have been amused by the idea.

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  1. Gallery: Meet 'The World's Poorest President'

    Dubbed the "world's poorest president", Uruguay's President Jose Mujica has been offered $1m for his 27-year-old Volkswagen Beetle

The 79-year-old says he will donate any money he receives to an organisation that provides housing for homeless people

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A former urban guerrilla fighter with left-wing movement Tupamaros, he lives on a flower farm, where he is pictured here, in 2004

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Here he is in the month before his election as leader, on his farm on the outskirts of Montevideo

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Uruguay President Offered $1m For VW Beetle

We use cookies to give you the best experience. If you do nothing we'll assume that it's ok.

Video: Uruguay President's Beetle For Sale

Uruguay's president has revealed he was offered a million dollars for his blue 1987 Volkswagen Beetle.

The car has become a symbol of Jose Mujica's austere lifestyle.

Mr Mujica, the man once nicknamed "the poorest president in the world", told a local publication that an Arab sheik had offered to pay $1m (£631,000) for the humble car.

The offer followed the Mexican ambassador to Uruguay's suggestion that Mr Mujica auction the Beetle in Mexico, predicting he could get 10 four-wheel-drive trucks for it.

Mr Mujica, who famously owns a three-legged dog, Manuela, said any money he received for the car would be donated to a programme he supports providing housing for the homeless.

The former leftist Tupamaro guerrilla leader said that if he bought trucks for it, they could go to Uruguay's public health office or his campaign workers.

The South American country's citizens have been amused by the idea.

1/18

  1. Gallery: Meet 'The World's Poorest President'

    Dubbed the "world's poorest president", Uruguay's President Jose Mujica has been offered $1m for his 27-year-old Volkswagen Beetle

The 79-year-old says he will donate any money he receives to an organisation that provides housing for homeless people

]]>

A former urban guerrilla fighter with left-wing movement Tupamaros, he lives on a flower farm, where he is pictured here, in 2004

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Here he is in the month before his election as leader, on his farm on the outskirts of Montevideo

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22.56 | 0 komentar | Read More

UK 'Halves' EU Surcharge, Osborne Says

Britain will pay the European Union half (£850m) of the £1.7bn surcharge it had demanded, Chancellor George Osborne has said.

Speaking after meeting European finance ministers in Brussels, he added that the deal, which means the bill will be paid in two interest-free instalments after next year's election, was "far beyond what anyone expected us to achieve".

"Instead of footing the bill we have halved the bill, we have delayed the bill, we will pay no interest on the bill and if there are any mistakes in the bill we will get our money back," he said.

Prime Minister David Cameron said: "I said we wouldn't pay £1.7 billion on December 1. We've now halved the bill and will pay nothing until next July. We're delivering for Britain."

However, Sky's Europe Correspondent Robert Nisbet says it appears the EU will still get the full £1.7bn as a result of what he said some would call "clever accounting".

Video: Migrant Movements 'Not Unqualified'

Nisbet explained: "Next year there will be two instalments that will equal £850m that will be paid to Brussels by the UK and it will get its rebate in full. So far so good.

"But the following year, in 2016 it appears that Britain won't be getting all of its rebate back, it will be the rebate minus £850m.

"So in effect Britain over the next few years is still going to be paying about £1.7bn but it's going to be done in a way that spreads the pain over a couple of years."

The revelation that the 2016 rebate will be used to pay the remaining £850m has sparked a debate about whether the agreement is a good deal for Britain.

A 10 Downing Street source insisted there was "no guarantee the rebate would have applied to this" before the deal was struck, and added: "Our view is that this is a very good deal."

However, Conservative MEP Daniel Hannan  suggested the devil of the deal was in the detail, saying: "The EU sticks us with a bill. Ministers double it, apply the rebate, return to the original figure and claim victory. We're meant to cheer?" he said.

Video: 'Major Problem' Over EU Bill Demand

"Britain is worse off in absolute terms, but a straw man has been knocked down. A prelude to how the pro-EU side will fight the referendum."

UKIP leader Nigel Farage wrote on Twitter: "Osborne trying to spin his way out of disaster. UK still paying full £1.7 billion, his credibility is about to nose dive."

Mr Osborne said that EU rules would now be changed forever "so this never happens again", saying he had got his EU counterparts to agree to changing the system for calculating adjustments to member states contributions.

The PM earlier warned there would be a "major problem" if Brussels insisted on Britain paying the bill in full.

Mr Cameron went on the offensive after a meeting with other European leaders in Finland, saying Britain would not pay "anything like" the full amount ahead of a looming 1 December deadline.

The demand was made by Brussels after a recalculation of Britain's gross national income in relation to other EU states.


22.56 | 0 komentar | Read More
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