The head of the Eurogroup Jean-Claude Juncker has lashed out "propaganda" suggesting that a politically-paralysed Greece would now exit the currency.
"I don't envisage, not even for one second, Greece leaving," Juncker said after talks last night among finance ministers in Brussels.
He said the 17 euro zone partners unanimously affirmed their "unshakeable desire" to keep Athens in the club during the talks.
"This is nonsense, this is propaganda," the Luxembourg premier insisted of what economists have baptised 'Grexit.'
Asked if Spain might call on a euro zone financial firewall rather than plough plummeting state revenues into propping up banks once more, Juncker said: "I do think that the Spanish government will do whatever has to be done."
Official forecasts suggest Spain - which faces ever-more-intrusive EU management of its public finances - has little chance of meeting even revised government deficit targets agreed in Brussels.
Such talk was only inflamed by Austrian finance minister Maria Fekter claiming that Greece would not only have to leave the euro zone but the European Union itself.
Juncker, whose mandate at the head of the finance ministers' forum ends in July, stressed that partners "will do everything possible" to prevent such an outcome. Of the exit talk, he insisted that "absolutely no-one argued in that direction."
He said Europe must "respect" Greek democracy, slamming "constant provocation" since May 6 elections returned a majority for anti-austerity or anti-EU parties.
Greek President Carolos Papoulias had been holding last-ditch talks with party leaders, seeking to forge an emergency government and avoid the need for fresh elections next month.
Juncker castigated "lectures" for Greece "day after day," scolding high-ranking leaders. "This is not the way to deal with partners, colleagues, friends and citizens in the EU," he added.
The bargaining strength of far-left and far-right leaders in Athens has seen EU rhetoric harden - Spanish Foreign Minister Jose Manuel Garcia-Margallo warning that membership of the euro zone club depends on "complying with the rules of the game."
EU partners have already granted Greece €148 billion of loans, and while Juncker said "this is not the time to relax" on budgetary consolidation and reforms, he nonetheless held out the possibility of re-negotiating timetables for actions set as conditions.
"We wouldn't preclude a debate about an extension," Juncker said, despite German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble stating that "it's not about generosity" towards Greece.
The darkening mood has seen European shares sink and the euro tumble to its lowest point since January, as markets fret over the possible knock-on effects on the eurozone banking system in Spain and Italy.
Finance ministers from the rest of the EU join their euro zone counterparts today to examine rules governing banks' capital - around the same time official data is expected to confirm the euro zone has slumped into its second recession in three years.
Juncker said Spain was ordered to "speed up" work on its banking sector, where bad debts after a property boom require costly repairs. One in four are unemployed in the country, but he urged Madrid "to put in place credible backstopsm" adding "speed is of the essence."
Asked if Spain might call on a euro zone financial firewall rather than plough plummeting state revenues into propping up banks once more, Juncker said: "I do think that the Spanish government will do whatever has to be done."
Official forecasts suggest Spain - which faces ever-more-intrusive EU management of its public finances - has little chance of meeting even revised government deficit targets agreed in Brussels.