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Eurozone crisis: Leaders ready for 'do-or-die' summit

European Union officials are preparing for a key summit in Brussels, where they

will be trying to clinch a deal on how to tackle the eurozone debt crisis.

The talks have been described by analysts as "do-or-die" for the 17 eurozone

nations.

Germany and France are pushing for new EU treaties, saying stricter fiscal

rules should be enshrined there.

Meanwhile the European Central Bank is set to cut interest rates amid fears the

eurozone is in recession.

European Commission chief Jose Manuel Barroso, who is in the French city of

Marseille, has urged EU to "do everything" to save the euro ahead of the

Brussels summit.

"The entire world is watching. We must do everything" to save the euro, he

said, adding: "It is extremely important that we all together, all the EU, show

that the euro is irreversible."

Mr Barroso is attending the annual congress of the centre-right grouping in the

European Parliament, the European People's Party (EPP), in the southern French

city, which French President Nicolas Sarkozy and German Chancellor Angela

Merkel are also due to attend.

French Europe Minister Jean Leonetti has said the single currency and the EU

itself could be under threat if leaders fail to tackle the debt crisis.

Analysis

image of Chris Morris Chris Morris BBC News, Brussels

This summit could become dominated by German determination to push through

far-reaching reforms come what may, and British determination to refuse to

accept the changes Berlin hopes all EU countries will agree to unless it gets

safeguards of its own.

Germany and France want treaty changes that will set out tough new rules for

governing the eurozone and automatic penalties for those who break them.

They're also calling for a new EU fast-track for progress on tax and employment

regulations involving the eurozone and anyone else who wants to join.

A group of senior European leaders including Chancellor Merkel and President

Sarkozy will hold their own negotiating session just before the summit begins,

but David Cameron won't be there. Some smaller countries will also be unhappy -

they feel they're simply being dictated to by Berlin and Paris.

But one thing will concentrate minds - the need to come up with some kind of

convincing statement to calm markets and protect the eurozone.

"The situation is serious - the euro can explode and Europe unravel," he told

French TV.

"That can be a catastrophe not just for Europe and for France but for the

world."

The 10 non-eurozone members of the 27-member EU, including the UK, are

concerned they may become isolated if the eurozone nations - driven by Berlin

and Paris - decide to move to a new treaty on their own.

Ahead of the summit, all the signs are that it could be a bruising affair, the

BBC's European affairs correspondent Chris Morris in Brussels reports.

On Wednesday, US President Barack Obama discussed the eurozone crisis with Mrs

Merkel during a telephone call. The White House said both leaders agreed that

any solution had to be lasting and credible.

US Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner has met new Italian Prime Minister Mario

Monti in Rome to discuss ways of supporting the eurozone, and how international

institutions like the IMF can assist the region "in this delicate phase", Mr

Monti said in Rome.

Mr Geithner says "the world can be encouraged by the progress made in the last

few weeks" and that the US has a very strong interest in the success of the EU

summit.

This is the latest in a series of talks Mr Geithner is holding with eurozone

leaders as US concern over the crisis deepens.

Merkel-Sarkozy letter

The key proposal on the agenda of the gathering in the Belgian capital later on

Thursday is how to enforce budgetary discipline with automatic penalties for

those eurozone nations that overspend.

Mrs Merkel and Mr Sarkozy are seeking to enforce this by changing the existing

EU treaties.

"We are convinced that we need to act without delay," the two leaders wrote in

a joint letter to European Council President Herman Van Rompuy, adding that the

new treaty was needed by March.

Mr Van Rompuy is offering a plan which requires only amending the treaties.

The Merkel-Sarkozy letter also called for "a renewed contract between the euro

area member states".

The German-French plan is based on the following key provisions:

the European Commission to have the power to impose penalties for nations that

run excessive budget deficits

all 17 eurozone nations should amend their national legislation to require

balanced budgets

the eurozone countries to have common corporation and financial transaction

taxes

any future bailouts would not require private investors to absorb part of the

costs, as happened in the Greece case

But an EU commissioner publicly derided the idea that sanctions alone could

compel euro member states to abide by the rules.

"Automatic sanctions are a joke. Fiscal union needs collective, democratic

decision-making that can respond to challenges & manage agg. [aggregate]

demand," tweeted EU Social Affairs Commissioner Laszlo Andor.

He told the BBC that smaller EU states were disgruntled at the dominance of

France and Germany in the decision-making process.

Mr Van Rompuy is offering a fast-track "fiscal compact" that does not need

lengthy ratification by parliaments or national referendums.

In an interim report, the European Council president, who will be chairing the

summit, argues that the necessary reforms can be adopted simply by amending a

protocol - a procedure that needs national consensus but does not require

substantial changes to the EU treaties.

This, Mr Van Rompuy argues, would speed up the implementation of reforms and

remove any potential political complications.

However, a senior German official dismissed as a "trick" talk of introducing a

fiscal agreement for the eurozone within existing treaties.

The official also admitted he was more pessimistic than a week ago about

reaching a deal in Brussels.

British 'safeguards'

Paris and Berlin appear to be pushing through more radical measures,

correspondents say, and if all 27 EU members cannot agree, then they are

prepared to work towards a new treaty involving the eurozone bloc and any other

country that wants to join.

Such a move could leave Britain - a non-eurozone EU member - feeling more

isolated.

Crisis jargon buster

Use the dropdown for easy-to-understand explanations of key financial terms:

AAA-rating

AAA-rating

The best credit rating that can be given to a borrower's debts, indicating that

the risk of borrowing defaulting is minuscule.

Glossary in full

UK Prime Minister David Cameron said on Wednesday that he would seek safeguards

for London's powerful financial sector at the summit.

"The more eurozone countries ask for, the more we will ask for in return," he

said.

Mr Cameron argues that a financial transaction tax would work only if adopted

globally.

Ahead of the summit, positions appear to be hardening, our correspondent says.

Such is the depth of the crisis surrounding the eurozone that the main focus is

not on the EU solidarity but on restoring market confidence in whatever way

proves possible, he adds. Earlier this week, Standard & Poor's put all eurozone

nations on credit watch "with negative implications".

The ratings agency said the decision was prompted "by our belief that systemic

stresses in the eurozone have risen in recent weeks to the extent that they now

put downward pressure on the credit standing of the eurozone as a whole".