Germany in fact was the country that pushed for the interest rates that made this necessary when no one else was pushing for inflation that low.
Could you elaborate? I've got a feeling that you aren't talking about the 2% inflation target, and I don't understand...
https://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/series/CP0000DEM086NESTThere is a "close to but under" 2% target. Even 1.5% would be considered a failure on those terms. But even considering 1.5% as "acceptable" despite what the charter said, that leaves German prices 15% lower then the charter target in 2008 before the shit hits the fan.
In order to hit the charter in accordance with stated EU policy laid out in the charter to which Greece entered the EU, Germany would need to accept inflation above 2% for a number of years to correct this imbalance. This did not happen. Germany enjoyed the fact that by pressuring the ECB to break the charter, they could shield themselves from the effects of the crisis. This came at the cost of making it so that a difficult adjustment for greece was impossible. And it made it so that an easy adjustment for Spain was made very, very difficult.
You criticize Greece for breaking the rules but Germany broke the rules on a scale that dwarfs Greece. And Greece has cleaned up it's act. Germany on the other hand is saying "Fuck you, we are going to keep doing this and you are going to support us in doing it."
The fact that the European economy is still this weak, 7 years after 2008 is ENTIRELY the fault of a German supported policy in the ECB. If it weren't for that Greece would be able to meet these debt obligations. Spain would not have a generation crushing catastrophe. It is the most destructive policy enacted in a capitalist society since the great depression. And not only do you insist that other people pay the price for these failed policies you refuse to stop them.