
7 8 July 2017
financial elite at the time by leftwing activists
and rightwing economists. But Varoufakis backs
it – and others -with quotes.
Varoufakis’s academic achievements are in
the application of game theory to economics. So
his strategy was to make the enemy believe
Syriza was prepared to default, or cut loose from
the euro system – so they would roll over loans
that were coming due, and hold off collapse of
the Greek banking system.
This worked, though at the price of a suspi-
cious rhetorical climbdown and retreat on
Syriza’s domestic programme in February 2015.
It failed in July because, after he had won an
emotional referendum campaign, Tsipras chose
compromise over war. Varoufakis needed better
allies but it is not clear if he deserved them. The
circularity does not disguise the truth that no
country is self-determining and no individual can
guarantee to buck the system.
Varoufakis expected to lose the referendum
and that sealed his fate.
Why did Varoufakis’ arguments fail to
convince?
He adduces evidence to show the European
authorities feared that any concessions to the
Radical Left would encourage similar move-
ments, in Spain – Podemos – and in Portugal,
Italy, France and Ireland, leading to a destabili-
sation of the global financial system.
But other forces were also at work.
An extraordinarily sinister event followed a
telephone conversation with US economist Jef-
frey Sachs, in which Varoufakis said the time had
come to default on payments to the IMF. Five
minutes later Sachs rang back after a shocked
and shocking call from the US National Security
Agency, whose informants had been monitoring
the line.
Varoufakis spares nobody. Greece’s creditors
sensed “their power mutate into insufferable
powerlessness [and] felt compelled to do their
worst”. He declares the tale can’t be told without
naming the antiheroes. He finds Tsipras to be an
enigmatic mix: optimistic, frivolous, melan-
cholic, over-keen to prove himself, a vacillator
and lazy thinker. Scorn is splashed at the Bank
of Greece governor, Yanis Stournaras, an old
friend. It is he who caused a bank run; not
Varoufakis’ strategy. He regards most of his
international foes as duplicitous: agreeing with
him in private but unreliable in public. Key exam-
plars are IMF chief Christine Lagarde, ECB
president Mario Draghi and the EU finance min-
isters who might have rallied to Greece in its
hour of desperation: Michel Sapin of France and
Pier Carlo Padoan of Italy. A named exception is
Emmanuel Macron, then economics minister in
Paris, who makes several private attempts to
help Athens but was thwarted. Varoufakis says
Merkel overheard Macron refer to the treatment
of Greece as like Versailles and ordered a com
-
pliant Hollande to keep him out of negotiations.
The European Commission and its president,
Jean-Claude Juncker, are simply weak. Particular
spleen is reserved for a heretofore unknown
Irishman with the unlikely name of Declan Cos-
tello, described to Varoufakis by an unnamed
Irish ambassador as “an un-Irish Irishman”, who
headed the European Commission’s team in
Athens and is derided by Varoufakis as a master
of the “runaround”, infiltrating the Greek admin-
istration and suborning Varoufakis’s own
deputy.
Varoufakis sees Germany as the key player.
Wolfgang Schäuble doesn’t even believe in
democracy and is angling to get the IMF into
France. He was “utterly powerless to do what he
knows is right”: some indictment. The German
finance minister confessed he wouldn’t sign a
third bailout if he was in Varoufakis’s shoes, but
he offered no alternative. Admittedly Varoufakis
doesn’t acknowledge the central truth that
Schäuble favoured “Grexit”. Merkel was the key.
She is a “small c conservative who doesn’t like
structural breaks”. She wouldn’t allow Grexit.
Tsipras didn’t see this, and that was crucial. In
the end her “outstanding work ethic” subdued
him entirely.
Varoufakis both is and is not the best person
to have led all this subversion. He’s so clever he
can never treat anything anyone throws at him
as gospel. He’s so unorthodox he doesn’t even
see himself as an economist: “I am a Professor
of Economics who has never really trained as an
economist. While I may have a PhD in Econom
-
ics, I do not believe I have ever attended more
than a few lectures on economics!”. It is evident
that his EU counterparts despair of him, just as
Tsipras does in due course. He accepts that it
was stupid to do the glamorous Paris Match fea-
ture he and his wife executed at the nadir of
Greece’s depression, as well as turning up to see
George Osborne in a leather jacket. But even
here he’s equivocal: he’d left his suitcase behind
in an Athens taxi. It’s not a big step to note the
equivocation in his acceptance that his revolu
-
tionary insider self could not give voice if it
risked, through instability, the welfare of his
people. Nor to say that, since his principal gripe
with the insiders - with the deep establishment,
was that they were willing to crush Greece in the
interests of a similar conservative vision of the
welfare of their own people and of the global
system, there is an apparent equivalence
between them and him. In the end this imputes
to Varoufakis a moral vacancy and even a stra
-
tegic circularity.
The deep establishment didn’t know what to
do and so they kicked Greece to touch, hoping
– not necessarily inaccurately – that things
would be ok, especially in their own fiefs, in the
end. He did not see this.
The game player got off the accelerating circle
and has become an honorary resident guest at
David McWilliams’ talks and on the BBC’s Ques
-
tion Time: not only the darling of the Corbynite
Left but a mascot for Britain’s Eurosceptic Right,
with the likes of former Chancellor Norman
Lamont, “a pillar of strength” among his early
admirers. Yanis Varoufakis lost his 2015 battle
with the enemy he’s spent a lifetime defining.
Greece isn’t getting the debt relief everyone
knows it needs. But Yanis is doing ok and the
book is excellent.
With ‘Adults in the Room’, according to Paul
Mason in the Guardian, Varoufakis has written
one of the greatest political memoirs of all time.
It stands alongside Alan Clark’s for frankness,
Denis Healey’s for attacks on former allies, and
– as a manual for exploring the perils of state
-
craft – will probably gain the same stature as
Robert Caro’s biography of Lyndon B Johnson.
The Financial Times reviewer said it is a “tremen-
dously indiscreet account by Varoufakis as he
draws upon his own audio recordings and diaries
of top-level meetings. It is deeply personal and
very well written, with an impressive array of lit
-
erary allusions”.
Varoufakis is doing better than his country.
And being the most interesting man in the world
while he does so. He’s working to build DiEM 25,
a pan-European, cross-border movement of
democrats. His aim is to repair the European
Union. Would you trust him? Read the book.
Varoufakis the game-
player is an equivocator,
morally vacant and
strategically circular
Greece GDP
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