Consider the statements by the party’s other prominent economist, Costas 
Lapavitsas, in the Guardian: “First, the forces of austerity currently 
strangling Europe should not be allowed to crush the Syriza experiment, 
or turn it into a moth-eaten compromise; second, Syriza should make 
solid and meticulous preparations for all eventualities, a point that is 
well understood by many within it.”

Having expected harsh resistance and an onslaught of veiled threats from 
the financial community, it would be naive to imagine Syriza hasn’t 
prepared for this exact scenario. If Varoufakis’ proposals, which are 
viewed as reasonable by most Greeks, are rejected by E.U. officials, 
more Greeks will consider leaving the European Union a necessary evil.

At that point, if a Syriza government still exists, Greece can threaten 
to leave the union. (It should be noted that in his book Crisis in the 
Eurozone, Lapavitsas has supported a Greek exit from the Eurozone and 
has argued that austerity throughout Europe has been counterproductive.) 
That’s when the German government’s mettle will be tested. Can the 
European Union afford a “Grexit” and its potential implications for 
Spain and other austerity-ravaged countries?

A Syriza government that remains in the union poses a problem for 
Germany and the United States on another front. Syriza has made it clear 
that it will veto any attempt to ratify the Trans-Atlantic Trade and 
Investment Partnership, an international trade agreement that both 
Germany and the U.S. want ratified urgently.

At that point, does the E.U. want Syriza to capitulate on a debt if it 
means the loss of the TTIP? Perhaps a Greek exit benefits the E.U. on 
that front. But can the E.U. afford to let Greece out if it means 
destabilizing the currency union further?

full: http://inthesetimes.com/article/17638/greece_eurozone
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