Just days after the US released documents related to the Jeffrey Epstein scandal, an unexpected link with Greece has emerged.
The files highlight a high-stakes exchange between Epstein and Ariane de Rothschild regarding Greece’s turbulent 2015 referendum and the political maneuvers of Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras of that time.
Epstein’s correspondence with Rothschild on Greece
The leaked emails, which make mention of hundreds of powerful global figures, reveal that Ariane de Rothschild, head of the historic Edmond de Rothschild Group, was in direct contact with Epstein regarding Greek affairs.
On July 6, 2015, only hours after the referendum results and Yanis Varoufakis’ resignation, Rothschild noted that Alexis Tsipras was looking to “claim Varoufakis’ head.” She predicted that replacing him with Euclid Tsakalotos would buy Tsipras political time and improve the atmosphere with EU partners without immediately altering the negotiation framework.
Epstein’s response was characteristically blunt. He argued that the resignation would actually result in a more significant problem for Greece, forcing the government to provide immediate solutions rather than proposals, concluding with the grim assessment: “Now they are truly f***ed.”
This provides a “behind-the-scenes” look at how members of the global financial elite and high-profile figures perceived a sovereign nation’s crisis in real-time.
While Greeks were focused on the events of the referendum, the international elite viewed the outcome through a clinical, tactical lens. Ariane de Rothschild’s observation that Tsipras wanted “Varoufakis’ head” means the removal of the controversial Finance Minister was deemed to be a calculated sacrifice to appease European creditors rather than a personal resignation.
Perhaps most jarring is that a disgraced financier (Epstein) and a private banker (Rothschild) were treating the fate of a country and its leadership as casual “shop talk.” It reinforces the idea that Epstein’s network wasn’t just about social status but about being positioned at the intersection of global finance and high-level political intelligence.
Epstein tracked Greek debt crisis
According to Greek newspaper To Vima, Greece appears over 1,500 times in the DOJ’s Epstein Library.
Epstein was tracking the Greek debt crisis as far back as 2010. Emails exchanges between Epstein and former UK Minister Peter Mandelson suggest Mandelson gave Epstein advance notice of the €500 billion ($589.4 billion) EU bailout for Greece on May 9, 2010—the night before it was officially announced.
While the recent 2026 dump focuses on political emails, earlier releases of Epstein’s “Black Book” (his personal contact list) contained several names of prominent Greek shipowners, socialites, and members of the former Greek Royal Family.
However, simply being in the book does not imply illegal activity; it often simply means someone moved in the same elite social circles in London, New York, or the Hamptons.
