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(Schauble represents that wing of the European bourgeoisie - still a minority, 
but growing - which no longer wants to throw “good money after bad”. It wants 
to force Greece out of the eurozone, providing it with a one time injection of 
seed money rather than continued bailouts costing hundreds of billions of euros 
which will never be fully recovered.)

Germany’s Wolfgang Schäuble puts Grexit back on the agenda
By Stefan Wegstyl
Financial Times
July 16 2015

Days after Greece appeared to escape crashing out of the euro, hawkish German 
finance minister Wolfgang Schäuble has put Grexit back on the political agenda, 
raising tensions in Berlin and across the EU.

Speaking before a key Bundestag vote on Friday, Mr Schäuble said voluntary 
departure from the eurozone “could perhaps be a better way” for Greece than a 
proposed €86bn bailout package, which was painfully assembled at a marathon 
eurozone summit in Brussels over the weekend.

Despite his misgivings, the 72-year-old German minister said he would still 
personally put the package to parliament. His hollow-sounding pledge was eerily 
familiar to one from Athens this week, where Greek premier Alexis Tsipras 
presented the same plan to Greece’s parliament while admitting he did not 
believe in it.

Mr Schäuble’s manoeuvre makes clear he is leaving open a Grexit option, even as 
he is formally backing the latest rescue plan to keep Greece in the eurozone. 
It is uncertain how much leeway he has been given by chancellor Angela Merkel 
to advance a historic rupture of the eurozone that he believes would ultimately 
strengthen both Greece and the single currency.

Ms Merkel, who celebrates her 61st birthday on Friday, has long given more 
weight than Mr Schäuble to the geopolitical costs of Grexit but has also said 
that a deal to prevent it cannot come “at any price”.

Her approach has hardened since June 26 when Mr Tsipras infuriated Greece’s 
international creditors by calling for a national referendum on their latest 
bailout offer.

It later emerged Mr Tsipras had informed the chancellor and French president 
François Hollande of his plans in a telephone call. But he neglected to say he 
would campaign against the deal. Ms Merkel only learnt the truth after Mr 
Tsipras announced his intentions on television. The chancellor’s complaints 
about the loss of trust in Athens have since multiplied.

Mr Schäuble said in a radio interview there was widespread concern — including 
at the International Monetary Fund — that Greece needed a debt cut for the 
rescue to work. But, he noted, a “debt cut is incompatible with membership of 
the currency union”.

Even if he favours a Grexit, Mr Schäuble may have to take a roundabout route to 
get there. He is wary of being seen to push Athens out the door for fear of 
breaking Germany’s decades-long commitment to European unity.

Such a move would also risk casting Ms Merkel as Europe’s bully — a claim many 
are already making after a summit in which she forced the capitulation of 
Greece’s defiant leftwing prime minister.

Berlin has already signalled that should Grexit come, Germany would generously 
support Athens, including with a debt cut.

Some EU officials believe Mr Schäuble’s repeated insistence that the IMF, which 
has partnered the EU in previous rescues, be included in a new bailout may be 
intended to engineer an eventual Grexit. The IMF has suggested it might not 
join a new Greek programme once its current rescue expires in March without 
heavy restructuring of existing eurozone loans. One EU official said Mr 
Schäuble could use this as “an excuse”.

Ms Merkel in the meantime seems certain to win the Bundestag vote on Friday on 
the proposed bailout. But about 60 MPs from her CDU/CSU bloc could rebel in 
protest against lending Athens even a cent more. The fact that Mr Schäuble will 
on Friday recommend the plan could win over some sceptics, thereby reducing Ms 
Merkel’s embarrassment.

The vote authorises only the start of negotiations, meaning Mr Schäuble will 
have time to manoeuvre before a second vote on the package itself, once 
negotiations are concluded.

Eckhardt Rehberg, the CDU’s budget spokesman, said: “The debate over a 
temporary Grexit has been important.”

But social democrats, also part of the coalition, are furious that Mr Schäuble 
harps on about Grexit and are urging him to stick to the script. Many suspect 
the finance minister is playing up Grexit partly to embarrass the leader of 
their SPD party, Sigmar Gabriel.

Mr Gabriel had agreed with Ms Merkel and Mr Schäuble that the Grexit option 
should be aired at the weekend summit as a way to put pressure on Athens. But 
now that a deal has been done, Mr Gabriel thinks Grexit should be off the 
agenda, not least because some SPD leftwingers are annoyed he backed it even as 
a negotiating tactic.

His discomfort suggests Mr Schäuble’s Grexit plan is already bringing him 
political gains, even if it never materialises.

Additional reporting by Peter Speigel in Brussels
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