German Chancellor Angela Merkel vowed on Friday to defend the euro, which she said was stronger than Germany's former deutschemark, but she warned that Europeans faced a long, hard "marathon" to restore lost credibility, according to Reuters. "Resolving the sovereign debt crisis is a process and this process will take years," Merkel said in an address to parliament. She called for a long-term approach to tighter fiscal integration in the euro zone, with tougher budget discipline, and dismissed the possibility of massive Fed-style money printing by the European Central Bank. "The European Central Bank has a different task from that of the U.S. Fed or the Bank of England," the German leader said. However the Sueddeutsche Zeitung daily said Merkel was willing to see the ECB step up its buying of troubled euro zone countries' bonds as a bridging solution until budget controls took hold. Speaking a week before a European Union summit seen as make-or-break for the 17-nation single currency area, Merkel ruled out issuing common euro zone bonds as a crisis solution, saying that would breach the German constitution. Instead, she called for a mixture of greater European powers to control national budgets, to be enshrined in treaty changes, and smart use of the euro zone rescue fund to stabilise markets. World stocks and European bonds continued to recover on hopes that euro zone leaders may be moving closer to a comprehensive solution to the debt crisis. Merkel's speech set the agenda for seven days of intense diplomacy to try to frame a new political deal to restore shattered market confidence and give the ECB grounds to act more decisively to defend the euro. In a crucial signal to markets, ECB President Mario Draghi opened the door on Thursday to more aggressive action to help fight the euro zone's sovereign debt and banking crisis if governments adopted a new "fiscal compact". On Monday, Merkel will travel to Paris to outline joint proposals with French President Nicolas Sarkozy for treaty changes to entrench stricter budget controls, with automatic sanctions on deficit sinners. Sarkozy embraced German calls for a new treaty tightening fiscal discipline in a policy speech in Toulon on Thursday, but in contrast to Merkel, he made no mention of greater powers for the European Commission and European Court of Justice. Instead, the French leader, struggling to win re-election next May, called for an "intergovernmental" Europe in which the presidents and prime ministers of euro zone countries would be the ultimate arbiters over national budgets. His socialist opponents denounced him for advocating an "austerity treaty" dictated by Germany. Merkel went out of her way to rebutt such accusations, telling the Bundestag it was "misleading" to suggest Germans were trying to dominate Europe. -- SPA