Here is a link to this incredible article: https://www.aol.com/article/news/2020/03/22/obamas-ebola-czar-on-wh-virus-bungling/23957857/
WASHINGTON
— The delay by the administration in making coronavirus tests available is a
problem that is now “too late to be fixed,” Ron Klain, who handled the 2014
Ebola crisis for former President Barack Obama’s administration, told Yahoo
News in a wide-ranging interview this week. Klain said that while President
Trump has fumbled several aspects of the federal government’s coronavirus
response, he expects the shortage of tests in the United States to be one of
the most enduring legacies of the crisis.
“The
No. 1 thing that people will flag from day one, where the administration has
just totally dropped the ball,” is testing, Klain said on the Yahoo
News “Skullduggery” podcast. “Because the main purpose of testing in
January, in February, was to identify where the disease was and isolate it
before it spread wildly. Now it’s spread.”
Klain
was chief of staff to former Vice President Joe Biden and is now a senior
adviser to Biden’s presidential campaign. Maintaining that his criticisms are
not motivated by politics, he singled out Republican governors Mike DeWine of
Ohio, Larry Hogan of Maryland and Charlie Baker of Massachusetts for their deft
and proactive responses to the coronavirus.
“Calling
out the Trump administration failures is not politicizing it,” Klain said. “It
is a demand for action to save lives.”
The
virus’s spread will cost thousands of American lives and will inflict long-term
damage on the economy, Klain said. And there is no clear indication that the
number of tests available in the U.S. will ramp up anytime soon.
“The
testing problem has not been fixed,” he said. “It’s not just that we were
promised a million tests three weeks ago and we’re still at probably fewer than
100,000. It’s not just that we were promised 1.4 million tests last week, and
we’re still at fewer than 100,000. It’s that even as we are talking today, we
are still at fewer than 100,000.”
And
with a few exceptions, only celebrities and well-connected leaders have easily
procured tests so far. “You can’t get a test unless you’re an NBA player or a
movie star or a member of Congress,” Klain said. “That is the reality.” He said
the administration’s decision not to use a test provided by the World Health
Organization is indefensible, particularly since almost every other country is
relying on the WHO test, and “they’re doing a better job of controlling this
disease than we are.”
Klain
said the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s subsequent failure to
quickly create its own test only exacerbated the problem and further exposed
the administration’s incompetence.
“As
all this was unfolding in January, in February, President Trump resisted the
demands that he put someone in charge at the White House,” Klain told
“Skullduggery” hosts Michael Isikoff and Daniel Klaidman. “He at first had no
one in charge at all. Then he put Alex Azar in charge, in just one Cabinet
department.”
Even
with Vice President Mike Pence now spearheading the administration’s response
to COVID-19, Klain said it is still unclear who is in charge since Trump’s
son-in-law, Jared Kushner, has taken over a task force to get private sector
testing launched “even as the public sector testing can’t get the supplies,
can’t get the reagents, can’t get the chemicals.”
“This
is still an ongoing mess,” Klain said. “It needs organization, it needs
direction and it needs prioritization. And finally, what it needs, really, is
accountability. We don’t really know how many people are being tested each day,
we don’t know where the gaps are. That’s not being reported by the Centers for
Disease Control on a real-time basis, and you can’t fix a problem if you can’t
measure a problem.”
Klain
published a scathing op-ed in the Washington Post in January laying out what he
believed the administration needed to do to have a shot at avoiding the current
crisis. He also testified before Congress in February to repeat his call for a
single White House czar to lead the administration’s response.
While
Klain said the incompetence of the administration is “bad enough,” he is even
more distressed that “the president of the United States, until a few days ago,
was up there saying this isn’t a problem. Just a couple of weeks ago, he said
there are only 15 cases, they’re all going away, [and] that the travel
restrictions on China had sealed the country up tight.”
Klain
said that while he was Ebola czar, even with Obama demanding answers, it was
still “difficult to get the bureaucracy to do the right thing.”
“If you have a president saying to people,
‘This isn’t a problem,’ if you have a president sidelining scientists who speak
out and say it’s a problem, and this president did, then it is absolutely
impossible to get the bureaucracy ... to do the right thing because inertia is
the default setting,” Klain continued. “And when you add to that inertia a
discouragement of action, a suppression of truth, you are going to go from
inaction to even what’s worse than inaction, and that’s what we saw here.”
Ebola,
a hemorrhagic fever that originated in Africa, was almost entirely controlled
in the United States, accounting for just a handful of cases, none by community
spread.
Trump,
a private citizen at the time, tweeted about Ebola more than 100 times in 2014,
denouncing the administration’s handling as criminally incompetent.
The
administration continues to fumble its response, said Klain, citing the CDC’s
guidance to doctors this week to use bandannas as masks when seeing patients,
since many hospitals have run out of masks.
“How
long can we put up with this?” he asked. “This is a social science experiment
with life or death consequences that we’re running in real time in the United
States.”
A
day after Trump stirred controversy by pointedly calling the coronavirus a
“Chinese virus,” Klain also said the administration’s initial obsequiousness
toward the country is a glaring contradiction. On Jan. 24, Trump tweeted praise
for the Chinese response and transparency in controlling the virus, Klain said,
even though the Chinese wouldn’t allow American scientists access to data they
needed to better understand the virus.
“President
Trump was slathering the praise on President Xi even as President Xi was
denying access,” Klain said. “So now that this has gone out of control, now,
when it’s too late, President Trump all of a sudden has found his voice and is
blaming China.”
Klain
singled out former White House national security adviser John Bolton’s 2018
decision to close the National Security Council office responsible for
responses to pandemics as an especially damning indictment of the administration.
Klain recommended creating the office after he led the Ebola fight for Obama.
He said it was clear to him then that the United States needed to be “prepared
for the next one.”
“We
knew this day was coming,” he said. “We didn’t know when and where, but we knew
it was coming. And President Obama put in place a structured plan for it.”
Trump
initially kept the NSC’s pandemic response unit, but later allowed Bolton to
disband it.
“There
is no question in my mind that we were less prepared for this and responded
less quickly because there was no one at the White House after the summer of
2018 in charge of preparing for and planning for this response,” Klain said.
“The president made a conscious decision with John Bolton to de-prepare the
country from where we were, and to disband the unit that was getting us ready.”
No comments:
Post a Comment
Please add your email address within the comment if you would like a reply.