Nearly 60 percent of Americans want the government to shut down flights to the U.S. from Sierra Leone, Guinea and Liberia,
sources of the Ebola virus. Why isn’t the White House playing ball? One
theory: because once again, President Barack Obama is serving his
legacy at the expense of the country.
Six years ago he put his
legacy-building healthcare legislation ahead of the need to create jobs
and reboot our fragile economy. Today, his ambition to be a hero to
Africa is undermining common sense approaches to protecting Americans
from the Ebola virus.
At issue is the enormous popularity of George W. Bush in Africa, a love affair that highlights how little, by comparison, Mr. Obama has done for that continent. As The New York Times
reported in 2013, Bush “is seen as a lifesaver who as president helped
arrest a deadly epidemic [AIDS] and promoted development of impoverished
lands.” As The Times noted, “During a final trip as president in
early 2008, Mr. Bush was warmly greeted by huge crowds of the sort he
never saw at home anymore.”
That’s a bitter pill for Mr.
Obama, who makes little secret of his dislike for his predecessor and
who, as our nation’s first black president, was expected to make great
contributions to Africa. It must gall him that U.S. approval ratings in
numerous important African countries have tumbled under his leadership.
According to Gallup, U.S. approval ratings in sub-Saharan Africa
peaked at 85 percent in 2009; by 2013 they had plummeted to 64
percent. They explained the likely source of the drop: “Given Obama's
Kenyan heritage, many Africans likely expected Obama to pay more
attention to Africa than they perceive he has.” In Kenya, the
birthplace of the president’s father, approval of the U.S. leadership collapsed from 93 percent in 2009 to 68 percent by 2013.
When both 43 and 44 happened to
overlap in Tanzania two years ago, Mr. Obama had to answer critics “who
complain he has not done enough to build on [Mr. Bush’s] efforts.” Where
has the White House fallen short? Anne Kamau, a fellow from the Africa
Growth Initiative, as posted on the Brookings website, said the Obama
administration has failed to build better business ties with Africa. She
writes, “Brazil, India, China and Turkey have recognized and taken
advantage of these opportunities; comparatively, the U.S. has not.”
Further, she argues the Obama government could do more by “engaging
in publicly visible and commercially oriented diplomacy on the
continent.” She doesn’t understand that this administration does not
think “business first.” Our non-oil imports from sub-Saharan Africa in
2013 amounted to just $13 billion compared to overall U.S. imports of $2.7 trillion. That says it all.Related: Ebola Patient Needs $500,000 to Cover Medical Bills
The president, who opened his 2013 speech at the University of Cape Town by saying, “Some of you may be aware of this, but I actually took my first step into political life because of South Africa,” is desperate to rebuilding his standing. He is trying to do so in foolish and dangerous ways.
Sending 4,000 American troops to
the epicenter of the viral outbreak, to help build medical facilities
and generally contribute manpower to the stricken and chaotic nations,
can only end in tragedy. This is not what our troops signed up for.
At the same time, President
Obama is refusing to cancel flights to the United States from the most
stricken nations. Other nations’ airlines starting banning flights to
and from Liberia, Sierra Leon and Guinea in August. By the end of that
month more than one third of international flights to the region had
been cancelled. Countries in the area, including South Africa and
Senegal, closed their borders with their neighbors to help stem the
spread of the disease. Chad closed its border with Nigeria after that
nation saw an outbreak of the deadly disease.
Instead of banning the flights, the White House has TSA workers
taking the temperatures of passengers arriving at five U.S. airports.
The fact that people may carry the virus for as much as 21 days before
displaying any symptoms – including fever – renders this effort
half-baked at best.
In fact, the entire response to
the Ebola outbreak by our government so far seems half-baked. Tom
Frieden, head of the Center for Disease Control, recently wrote on his
blog, “The U.S. health system has been preparing since late March” for
the arrival of the Ebola virus on our shores. In light of the death of
Thomas Duncan in Dallas and infection of one of his healthcare
providers, many Americans are wondering: what exactly was the nature of
those preparations?
Numerous errors occurred in
Dallas, where Mr. Duncan was treated and died, starting with the
hospital sending the feverish Liberian visitor home. The apartment where
the man was living was not sanitized for several days after his
diagnosis was confirmed, and the hospital did not include on its
monitoring list the nurse who has now contracted Ebola. Shouldn’t the
authorities consider anyone who came in contact with the dying man at
risk of contagion?
Let’s be honest: over those six
months, the CDC failed totally to communicate the urgency of the Ebola
threat, how to respond to it and how it might be transmitted. The Texas
Health Presbyterian Hospital where Mr. Duncan was treated is an 898-bed
acute-care hospital. If the first U.S.-diagnosed case had shown up in a
small town in the heartlands the lapses would be easier to understand.
We seem to be one of the few
nations not taking the spread of Ebola seriously. Perhaps we are just a
smidge overconfident. When Mr. Frieden assured the nation that we would
“stop Ebola in its tracks” earlier this month, he listed several
protocols that would keep the disease from spreading. Few of those
appear to have been followed.
Mr. Frieden was previously Commissioner of New York City’s Health Department. Highlights of his time
in that post include an aggressive anti-smoking media campaign and the
successful (and controversial) effort to stamp out trans-fats. Given his
past, he may have unwarranted confidence in the power of government.
Critics have called him an “overzealous activist.” In facing down the Ebola virus, we hope he is that and more.
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