hanging on whether both sides can agree on the language.
“Received Greek request for six months extension,” Dijsselbloem, who is also the Dutch finance minister, said in a tweet.
A spokesman for German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble said the Greek letter “does not meet the criteria” laid out by eurozone ministers.
In substance, the two sides are not that far apart, with new Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras willing to press on with reforms, if different from those embraced by previous conservative governments.
In return, Tsipras is demanding that the eurozone agree to short-term funding to buy the time needed to hammer out a new rescue deal, something the requested extension would provide.
But Germany rejects offering Greece more time outside the current arrangement, especially regarding the austerity commitments.
Schaeuble has accused Athens of wanting something for nothing and has urged Tsipras to “tell the Greeks the truth: there is no fast way out.”
Greece has proposed to stick to 70 percent of the existing bailout programme but would overhaul the remaining 30 percent which it sees as damaging to growth and toxic for ordinary Greeks.
Greek Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis insisted Greece and the eurozone were “on the right path”.
“I am optimistic it will end well tomorrow or the next day,” Varoufakis told reporters on Wednesday.
The European Commission, the EU’s executive arm, also seemed optimistic, believing that the Greek request could “pave the way” for a difficult compromise, a spokesman said.
With the European portion of the bailout expiring at the end of February, Greece’s creditors insist it needs extra financing to stave off the risk of a default and exit from the euro.
Providing much needed breathing room to Athens, the European Central Bank decided Wednesday to extend and increase the amount of emergency liquidity available to Greece’s vulnerable banks.
The decision to raise the ceiling of that funding by only 3.3 billion euros, however, was seen by analysts as a warning by the ECB, pushing Athens to clinch a deal with its eurozone partners as soon as possible.
As the clock ticked down to a Friday deadline set by Dijsselbloem, US Treasury Secretary Jacob Lew called Varoufakis to urge him to work on a deal based on the existing bailout agreement.
He told him “failure to reach an agreement would lead to immediate hardship in Greece, that the uncertainty is not good for Europe, and that time is of the essence,” the Treasury said Thursday.
An employee works on a tractor production line at a factory in Weifang, eastern Shandong province, China, on March 1,...
The image shows the sudden eruption of huge flame in a video being captured form distance on March 29, 2025. —...
Female ectricians posing for photo. —KE/FileLAHORE: Descon Technical Institute , in collaboration with Tapal Tea,...
A illustration showing a robotic figure against the backdrop of AI written in the background on May 4, 2023. —...
Labourers work at Hung Viet garment export factory in Hung Yen province, Vietnam December 30, 2020....
This image shows a person counting Pakistan currency notes. — AFP/FileKARACHI: Bank lending to the private sector...