Frank Friday Posted on Tuesday, October 14, 2014

The U.S. Military Can Battle Ebola

Shyama Venkateswar Distinguished Lecturer, Hunter College and Director, Public Policy Program, Roosevelt House

The recent Ebola outbreak has given the global medical community pause as it figures out how such a deadly disease can spread so rapidly across a few countries in West Africa and now to a few cases reporting in Spain and the United States. Health officials this week have confirmed that 3,865 people have died due to the Ebola virus – not counting the case of Thomas Duncan, the Liberian who died in Dallas, Texas – with 8,033 additional cases of suspected or confirmed Ebola in West Africa. The response in Africa has been too slow and the health infrastructure severely inadequate. Struggling countries like Liberia, Sierra Leone, Senegal and Guinea are ill-prepared to deal with the rapidity of the contagion and the need for critical public health resources to be deployed in a hurry to stop the spread.

The global medical response to the crisis has also been inadequate. Reports of essential medical supplies and protective gear sitting at the docks in Sierra Leone unable to get clearance because of the complex tangle of political feuds can confound the casual observer, but these are some of the stark realities that make managing a crisis of this magnitude so difficult.

Issuing travel bans to Ebola-stricken West African nations is not necessarily the answer as it limits the ability of badly-needed medical personnel to reach the affected areas. Containing the spread of the disease in Africa is the key to preventing its spread in Europe, the United States, and elsewhere. The U.S., its NATO allies and other industrialized countries have a particular obligation to pay attention to global health pandemics because of the global human security element that transcends national borders.

The rapid spread of Ebola in West Africa makes it clear that well-planned and organized deployment of resources for medical care undertaken by an institution like the military is sorely needed. Africa, like elsewhere in the world, needs the distribution of experimental drugs, treatment centers, medical equipment, and manpower that can trace and halt the spread. The medical system needs to be ready; the recent deaths from Ebola in Texas and in Spain remind us that even wealthy nations can be caught unprepared for the inevitable spread of deadly diseases.

President Obama’s announcement to send 3,000 troops to Liberia is a step in the right direction to put US resources in the right place even though his action has come under criticism. The U.S. military as an institution can bring leadership and coordination, has the ability to quickly erect effective treatment centers and mobile labs, provide transportation and training by military medical personnel, and can deploy other resources easily available to the richest country in the world. West Africa’s health crisis is not a continent and an ocean away; it is right here in our midst. Using the U.S. military to halt the deadly spread of Ebola is in all our best interests.


 

Shyama Venkateswar is Director of the Public Policy Program at Roosevelt House and Distinguished Lecturer at Hunter College. In this capacity, she leads the Public Policy Program’s undergraduate curriculum, teaches the senior Capstone Seminar, co-manages faculty initiatives, works closely with city & state agencies for student internships, manages adjuncts, and directs a scholars program funded by the Jewish Foundation for Education of Women. She is a regular columnist for Roosevelt House’s website on a variety of national and global policy issues on conflict resolution, food security, women’s leadership, criminal justice reform, among others. She has almost twenty years of experience in research, policy and advocacy focusing on social justice issues, both in the U.S. and globally. Before coming to Hunter College, she worked at the National Council for Research on Women (NCRW), where she served as Director of Research & Programs, and helped provide the vision and strategic direction for the Council’s policy agenda on economic security for low-income women, diversity in higher education and the corporate arena, women’s leadership, and ending global violence against women. She is co-author of two NCRW reports, Caring for Our Nation’s Future; and The Challenge and the Charge: Strategies for Retaining and Advancing Women of Color in addition to numerous commentary and opinion pieces on poverty, job creation, peace-building, and immigrant rights published in The Miami Herald, The San Francisco Chronicle, The Philadelphia Inquirer, Asia Times, The Indian Express, and the Chicago Sun-Times. She has given Congressional briefings, and presented her research findings to academic, policy, advocacy and corporate audiences. She received her Ph.D. in Political Science from Columbia University and is a graduate of Smith College.