Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras may have won a victory at home on Sunday as the Greek people dealt a resounding “no” to European austerity policies.
But Greece
 risks paying a high price for that decision. While the vote sharply 
consolidated Mr. Tsipras’s popularity, that could fade quickly if he 
leads the country deeper into bankruptcy and financial chaos, creating a
 new round of instability with consequences for Greece and the broader 
European project.
If
 anything, Mr. Tsipras is likely to find it harder, rather than easier, 
to strike a new financing deal quickly with European creditors, 
heightening the risk that Greece will careen out of the eurozone unless 
Europe decides to give Mr. Tsipras and his defiant nation another 
chance.
“What
 we need now is more wisdom from both sides,” said Loukas Tsoukalis, the
 president of the Hellenic Foundation for European and Foreign Policy, 
an Athens-based think tank. “Greece can’t go on because we’re on the 
edge of cliff,” he said. “After all this, the question is whether our 
partners would be so unwise as to push Greece over the edge, because 
that would be damaging for everyone.”
Some
 European officials acknowledged Sunday that greater flexibility might 
now be needed from their camp. Just as the referendum vote divided 
Greece, so, too, did it reveal fault lines between those European 
countries that appear willing to bend to keep Greece in the eurozone, 
and others, including Germany and the Netherlands, whose policy makers 
have all but suggested that the eurozone would be better off without 
Greece.






