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Bush seizes on flu threat to press for martial law power
By Bill Van Auken
7 October 2005
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President Bush Tuesday seized on the threat of a global bird
flu pandemic to press yet again for the legislative changes to
grant him power to deploy US combat troops in police operations
on American soil.
Bush suggested that large numbers of troops could be needed
to effect a quarantine, essentially sealing off whole
cities or regions of the country in the event of an outbreak.
The policy questions for a president in dealing with
an avian flu outbreak are difficult, Bush said in a rambling
answer to a question posed at a White House press conference Tuesday.
One example: If we had an outbreak somewhere in the United
States, do we not then quarantine that part of the country? And
how do you, then, enforce a quarantine?... And who best to be
able to effect a quarantine?
Answering his own question, Bush declared, One option
is the use of a military thats able to plan and move. So
thats why I put it on the table. I think its an important
debate for Congress to have.
The presidents talk of deploying troops to enforce quarantines
has no precedent as a public health measure in the US. Historically,
quarantines have been applied against individuals and families
diagnosed with an infectious disease, or used in extreme circumstances
to prevent the congregation of large groups of people in areas
where a disease is spreading.
But sealing off whole regions of the country by military force
and preventing anyone from entering or leaving them has more in
common with civil war measures than preventive health care.
It is not clear why the military would be needed for such an
operation, unless it would be to set up roadblocks and shoot down
anyone attempting to escape a region placed under quarantine.
Public health professionals blasted the proposal, warning that
the presidents remarks were indicative of the administrations
failure to prepare for the looming flu threat.
Referring to the danger of a flu pandemic, Irwin Redlener,
director of the National Center for Disaster Preparedness at Columbia
University, warned that the US government is phenomenally
not prepared for this.
Describing Bushs proposal as extraordinarily draconian,
Dr. Redlener added, The translation of this is martial law
in the United States.
Bushs call for using troops to fight the flu follows
his insistence in the wake of Hurricane Katrina that the Pentagon
take charge of all major disaster response and relief. The response
to the devastation in New Orleans was itself delayed until the
US military was able to mass large number of combat-equipped troopsa
delay that caused immense suffering and not a few deaths for those
trapped in the city.
In the aftermath of the hurricane disaster, Bush and other
administration officials have repeatedly urged Congress to repeal
or amend the Posse Comitatus Act, an 1878 statute that bars the
use the military in domestic policing, except in the case of suppressing
an insurrection.
The Bush administration is attempting to take advantage of
growing concern over a potential pandemic to advance a political
agenda that has nothing to do with the threat to public health.
In a closed-door briefing to Congress last week, Health and
Human Services Secretary Michael Leavitt said that in the US an
avian flu outbreak could kill as many as 2 million, while requiring
as many as 10 million hospitalizations.
Over the last eight years, avian influenza has been reported
in 11 countries, most of them in Asia. The flu has been spread
by migratory birds, with recent reported cases in Siberia.
While killing hundreds of millions of birds, the current H5N1
strain of avian flu has spread to only approximately 100 humans,
some 60 of whom died. Until now, most human victims have been
infected directly from birds, with little evidence of transmission
from humans to humans, the prerequisite for a pandemic.
Nonetheless, scientists have warned for years that the deadly
virus could mutate into a form easily transmitted between humans,
putting millions of lives at risk, and many are now expressing
near certainty that this will happen. Science magazine
reported recently that according to expert opinion the odds of
a global outbreak are 100 percent.
In one grim indication of the seriousness with which world
governments are taking the threat, the British press revealed
recently that officials in the Blair government are making contingency
plans for the erection of mass mortuaries that could deal with
the bodies of as many as 700,000 people.
In France, meanwhile, the government has bought some 200 million
protective facemasks and sufficient quantities of drugs to cover
the entire population.
Washington, however, has done relatively little in the way
of preparation. US health agencies reportedly have just 2 million
doses of Tamiflu, an antiviral drug that has proven effective
in combating the H5N1 virus. This is barely enough for 1 percent
of the American population. While the US Senate has passed legislation
to purchase large quantities of the medicine, the supply is limited.
It is produced solely by the global pharmaceutical giant Roche
Holding AG of Switzerland, and Washingtons orders have come
in after those of a number of countries in Europe and elsewhere.
Ironically, the belated US attempt to secure a greater share
of the drug could contribute to the spread of any future pandemic.
Health experts have stressed that the best chance for combating
it would be to massively treat those in the immediate area of
the first human outbreak. WHO stockpiles are very low, however,
and the monopolization of drugs by wealthier countries is likely
to make that impossible.
While other US funds are being allocated for the production
of vaccines, public health experts warn that the development of
a vaccine effective in countering the current virus could take
years.
The government has delayed for years issuing a comprehensive
pandemic influenza plan, leaving open such questions as what role
federal agencies would take in purchasing and distributing drug
supplies to combat the virus. The delay has left state and local
health departments unable to develop their own emergency plans.
The US public health-care system, already stretched to the
limit after decades of budget cuts and privatization, is ill-equipped
to confront a mass flu outbreak. The much-touted concern with
the threat of biological or chemical weapons attacks by terrorists,
meanwhile, has been accompanied by sharp cuts to agencies dealing
with the spread of disease, such as the Center for Disease Controls
emerging infectious disease program.
Crucial to any response to such a pandemic is what is known
as surge capacity, the health-care systems ability
to receive a sudden influx of mass casualties. For-profit health
care in the US, however, has ruthlessly cut back on excess capacity,
slashing the number of available hospital beds by about a third
over the past 25 years.
Successive governments have accelerated these cutbacks, viewing
public health as synonymous with big government and
a convenient area to slash spending in order to pay for tax cuts
and militarism.
Some public health experts have warned that the government
is seriously underestimating the economic and social impact of
a pandemic, which could include wholesale closures of factories
and the disruption of transportation, food supplies and other
essential functions.
Avian flu could be the Katrina of medicine, warned
John Bartlett, chief of the infectious-diseases division of Johns
Hopkins University School of Medicine.
As in the Katrina disaster, the Bush administrations
response to the flu threat combines criminal incompetence and
negligence with conspiracies against the American people.
The administration is seizing upon every social crisis, both
real and potential, to press for the unrestricted power to impose
martial law in the United States. Significantly, neither the ostensible
political opposition in the Democratic Party nor the mass media
has subjected these proposalsincluding the absurd call for
using troops against the fluto probing criticism.
Within Americas ruling establishment, there is a growing
sense that economic and social crises, combined with the unprecedented
class polarization between the financial elite and the masses
of working people, are creating conditions for social upheavals.
The political response is an ever-greater turn toward the methods
of police-state dictatorship.
See Also:
In the wake of Katrina
and Rita
Bush administration to expand military powers, attack social
programs
[27 September 2005]
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