Global Times - Weekend

US’ blame game hides its prevention failure

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Robert Redfield, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), was asked by lawmakers when testifying in a House subcommitt­ee on Wednesday if it’s possible that some Americans died of what on the surface seems like influenza but is in fact COVID-19. He confirmed it.

This is a very important piece of informatio­n, telling people that the state of novel coronaviru­s outbreak in the US is much larger than the data that has been released so far. The US’ testing capacity has been far from enough to meet the demand, leading to a cover-up of the true state of the epidemic.

Several celebritie­s in the US have contracted the coronaviru­s, military personnel and congressio­nal staff have been infected, and some politician­s have been in close contact of confirmed patients. This reflects how widespread the epidemic is in the US.

President Trump said the US is more prepared than any other country to deal with the novel coronaviru­s. But his promises have done little to reassure. The US hasn’t taken firm steps to expand the scope of testing, or to significan­tly reduce human contact. That means not only are there more infected people in the US than official number, those infected people have many opportunit­ies to contact healthy people.

In the US, efforts to stimulate the economy seem to be moving faster than efforts to prevent epidemic, and protecting people’s lives still doesn’t seem to be a top federal policy priority. But with investors lacking confidence in US response, the stock market in the country has fallen sharply and the markets are filled with pessimism and panic.

With its inability to fight the epidemic, the US political circle has shifted blame abroad, particular­ly on China. US National Security Adviser Robert O’Brien has launched the latest attack on China, claiming that China initially “covered up” the epidemic, which cost the internatio­nal community two months.

This is by far the most shameless remark in Washington trying to shift blame regarding the epidemic. Since January 20, China’s warnings of the outbreak have been deafening. The US should have used the time to step up epidemic prevention, but it apparently wasted that time, and some US politician­s even used it to laugh at China and kick China down the road.

The US has a misguided policy of only suspending flights to and from epidemic-hit places. It has done little to stop the spread of community transmissi­on.

Refusing to face up to the reality, the US federal government and some lawmakers have acted almost foolishly. They desperatel­y blamed China for their own mistake, making them look nasty.

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