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With new deal, Greece won’t seek third bailout, prime minister says

Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras spoke Saturday during a meeting of his Syriza party’s central committee in Athens.SIMELA PANTZARTZI/EPA

ATHENS — Greece won’t seek a third bailout deal, the prime minister said Saturday, having succeeded in separating the loan agreement from the ‘‘disastrous’’ austerity conditions imposed with the willing cooperation of previous governments.

Alexis Tsipras spoke Saturday at the start of a two-day meeting of his party’s central committee. The Syriza committee will elect a new general secretary and members of the political secretariat, replacing those members who were elected to Parliament in the January election.

Tsipras warned that although a ‘‘difficult battle in a long and difficult war’’ was won with the loan extension, difficulties lie ahead. And he recounted, for the benefit of the party membership, what transpired in the negotiations that led to the conditional loan extension agreement in the Eurogroup.

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‘‘We joined the battle in Europe with every step undermined,’’ claimed Tsipras. ‘‘The most aggressive European conservative forces, in cooperation with the (ex-Premier Antonis) Samaras government, had sprung up a trap to derail us before we had even governed.’’

Tsipras said he was referring to the extension of the second bailout agreement by only two months; a credit crunch; an empty treasury and banks ‘‘on the edge’’ of illiquidity; and commitments on further tough austerity measures.

‘‘They had everything set up to shipwreck us . . . and the country,’’ Tsipras said.

Meanwhile, the country’s finance minister said Saturday that Greece intends to start discussions with its creditors on debt rescheduling in order to make the country’s massive debt sustainable, at the same time as working on reform measures that need to be cemented by April.

In an interview with the Associated Press, Yanis Varoufakis also said Athens will prioritize debt repayments to the International Monetary Fund, some of which come due in March, but that repayments to the European Central Bank are ‘‘in a different league’’ and will need discussion with Greece’s creditors.

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‘‘The IMF repayments of course we are going to prioritize, we are not going to be the first country not to meet our obligations to the IMF,’’ Varoufakis said in his office in the Finance Ministry. ‘‘We shall squeeze blood out of stone if we need to do this on our own, and we shall do it.’’

However, ‘‘the ECB repayments are in a different league and we shall have to determine this in association with our partners and the institutions.’’

Greece faces IMF repayments in March of about $1.69 billion, and about $7.5 billion to the ECB in the summer.

In his speech, the prime minister singled out Spain and Portugal as leaders of ‘‘an axis of forces’’ that ‘‘for obvious political reasons were trying to lead the negotiation to the edge of the precipice, taking the risk of developments spiraling out of control, so that they could avoid internal political risk.”