The gutting of Greek and Italian democracy in 2011 was the result of a toxic combination of massive financial integration with Berlin’s dogged insistence on intergovernmentalism. The lack of overarching structures with which to compensate for the asymmetric effects of the crisis enforced conformity to Berlin’s vision of financial probity, one state at a time. Around the chancellery in Berlin, in the wake of the changes in Greece and Italy they were not bemoaning the oppressive force of markets. Senior officials could be heard boasting: “We do regime change better than the Americans.”52