ian bremmer, president and founder of the eurasia group, a leading political and economic consulting firm in new york. ian, nice to have you with us. >> good evening to you. >> susie: well, it sounds like greece is getting a closer to agreeing to some tough austerity measures that european policy makers have fwn demanding. they're still haggling on pensions and a few details. what is your take on the situation right now? >> well, my take is that there's still capacity on the part of both the germans, the european central bank and the greeks to muddle through. we're not in d-day yet. the deal hasn't fallen apart, there's no structured defought yet, but that day is coming, it coming in part because the strong austerity that is being imposed by the core europeans on the greeks. this new greek government that comes in with early elections will absolutely not continue. so we're going to have a reprieve for a short period of time, and then we're going to go right back into crisis around greece. >> susie: so greece is still in crisis mode, even though it's promising these reforms, and i gues