"We're going bust." "No, you're not." "You're strangling us." "No
we're not." "You owe us for World War Two." "We gave already."
The game of chicken between Greece and its international creditors
is turning into a vicious blame game as Athens lurches closer to
bankruptcy with no cash-for-reform agreement in sight.
Europe's political leaders and central bankers and Greek politicians
agree on only one thing: if Greece goes down, they don't want their
fingerprints on the murder weapon.
If Athens runs out of cash and defaults in the coming weeks, as
seems increasingly possible, no one wants to be accused of having
pushed it over the edge or failed to try to save it.
Greece's leftist government has already identified its culprit of
choice - Germany, Europe's main paymaster, accused of having
inflicted toxic austerity policies on Greeks, causing a
"humanitarian crisis".
Eurozone governments are preparing the ground to blame the novice
government of Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras for having blustered,
obstructed, failed to meet commitments and evaded hard choices while
Athens burned.
"We are doing everything we can to save Greece from itself, but in
the end, it's up to them," is the message pouring out of Berlin,
Brussels and IMF headquarters in Washington.
Tsipras and outspoken Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis tried at
first to mount a coalition against Berlin, touring France, Italy,
Britain, Brussels and media studios after their election. They found
no allies outside the media.
Tsipras revived demands for reparations for the Nazi German
occupation of Greece in 1941-44, which his government put at 279
billion euros ($303.5 billion) - more than its 240 billion euro
bailout from the eurozone and the International Monetary Fund.
Berlin responded that it had already compensated victims and a 1990
agreement with the four victorious World War Two powers on German
unification had put an end to war claims.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel has been careful to express goodwill
and tried to build a relationship of trust with Tsipras while
insisting Greece must meet its lenders' reform conditions, which
include fiercely resisted pension cuts and labor reforms.
"Everything must be done to prevent" Greece running out of money,
she said after talks with Tsipras last week. "On the German side, we
are prepared to provide all the support that is asked of us. But of
course reforms must be done," she added.
Investors briefly hoped her pledge might be a turning point, similar
to European Central Bank President Mario Draghi's 2012 vow to do
"whatever it takes to preserve the euro".
But Merkel's comments could also be interpreted as an exercise in
pre-emptive blame avoidance. Unlike Draghi, she did not say who
should do everything to stop Greece going bust.
Her finance minister, Wolfgang Schaeuble, is openly skeptical of
whether Athens can avoid crashing out of the eurozone.
Angry eurozone finance ministers made clear they were far from a
deal with Greece, rejected Varoufakis' plea for early cash in return
for partial reform and told him they would not even discuss
longer-term funding and debt relief until Greece signed and
implemented a full reform plan.
While Greece's leaders insist Europe must heed and respect the
democratic will of the Greek people, its creditors reply that they
too have democratic mandates from their voters.
In Varoufakis' narrative, eurozone countries did not lend all that
money to save Greece in the first place but to protect their own
banks, which had imprudently lent Athens billions.
Nonsense, say eurozone officials. Those banks took losses in 2012
when Greek debt to private bondholders was restructured.
Varoufakis has widened the circle of blame to the ECB, accusing it
of "asphyxiating" Greece by starving its banks of liquidity and
severely limiting their short-term lending to the government.
That prompted an indignant response from ECB President Mario Draghi,
who told the European Parliament the central bank's support for
Greece amounted to some 110 billion euros, but it was barred by
treaty from monetary funding of governments.
For weeks Greek officials have been telling their eurozone
counterparts they have run out of money, only to find spare cash to
make the next debt payment. "They have cried wolf so often that when
they are really going bust, no one will believe them," one EU
negotiator said on condition of anonymity.
Insiders say the ECB is determined that the central bank will not be
the institution that pulls the plug. If it considers support for
Greek banks is no longer tenable, it will seek a political decision
by European Union governments.
"This is not something unelected central bankers should decide," a
source in the Eurosystem of central banks said.
European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker is eager to hold
Tsipras' hand until the last minute in the hope that he will impose
an unpalatable economic reform deal on left-wingers in his Syriza
party before it is too late.
For Juncker, one of the fathers of Europe's single currency, the
departure of a single member from the 19-nation eurozone would be a
grievous blow to the bloc's global standing and could set a
dangerous precedent, encouraging investors to speculate against
other member states in future crises.
Even if it stayed in the eurozone, a Greek default on other European
governments or the ECB would be one of the most acrimonious moments
in the history of the European Union.
Amid mutual recrimination over ruined Greek savers and cheated
European taxpayers, some fear demonstrations by Greek pensioners or
hospital patients and violence in Athens.
If it happens, there will be plenty of blame to go around, but no
one to take responsibility.