Discussions within the U.K. Parliament reveal that British leaders are hoping for a quick end to the European Union via a Greek collapse.
Former Foreign Secretary Jack Straw said, concerning the Euro: “…is going to collapse…” and “Is it not better that this happens quickly rather than a slow death?”
Current Financial Secretary to the Treasury, Mark Hoban said: “I am not going to comment on whether the eurozone will remain intact or not. Clearly, this crisis demonstrates the huge strain the eurozone in under. That is why it was right for us to stay out of the eurozone.”
Current Prime Minister, David Cameron said: “We were not involved in the first bailout of Greece; we don’t believe the European financial mechanism should be used in any way.”
Conservative Member of Parliament, Anne Main said Greece “…should be allowed to depart peacefully from the eurozone.”
Current Chief Secretary to the Treasury, Danny Alexander, said the U.K. would not help Greece: “The package for Greece that is already in place is a eurozone package with the IMF. It’s the eurozone that is taking forward discussions now about the next stage of dealing with Greece’s substantial problems. There’s simply no proposition on the table for the U.K. to contribute beyond that IMF involvement and I don’t expect there to be one.”
When you take what the British leaders are saying, along with the International Monetary Fund’s warnings that the default of Greece will lead to a collapse of European Union, then it definitely looks like the British want Greece to default. Historically the British never really liked the concept of the European Union.