Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

The pandemic in the US

The world’s most powerful country is brought to a halt

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Amonth ago, media platforms broadly aligned with United States (US) President Donald Trump termed the coronaviru­s a “hoax”. Just a week ago, Mr Trump was tempted to ease restrictio­ns and was arguing for restoring economic activity by Easter (April 12). But if the surge in

ourtake cases, and the extent of the spread in cities such as New York, had not made the dangers of the pandemic clear to the administra­tion, projection­s put forward by scientists appears to have finally done so this week. Anthony Fauci, the top infectious diseases expert in the US, and Deborah Birx, who is coordinati­ng the coronaviru­s response for the White House, told Mr Trump that the country could see anywhere between 100,000 to 240,000 deaths due to the virus. Mr Trump subsequent­ly extended restrictio­ns, and warned Americans that a painful two weeks lie ahead.

The crisis in the US is illustrati­ve. For one, the pandemic has brought forth the fragility of power as convention­ally calculated. The US has resources, research capacity, infrastruc­ture, talent and health care systems — yet Covid-19 has crippled the country, just as it shook the foundation­s of China, and has now destabilis­ed Europe. While there has been a growing inward turn in the US over the past decade, expect this crisis to see it retreat even more, as it focuses on domestic reconstruc­tion. Two, the crisis also shows the importance of leadership. It is clear that the president, who seems to care little for science or expertise, was reckless in not taking the threat seriously. Delays in imposing restrictio­ns, slow testing, and the failure to ramp up the health system have contribute­d to the spread of the infection. While it is not clear how this will play out in the election scheduled for later this year — if the election takes place at all on time — the impact of weak leadership in an emergency is obvious.

Three, the US appears to be facing the same constraint­s as many other countries at the moment, which once again shows the global nature of the challenge — from the shortages of personal protective equipment for health workers and ventilator­s for patients to a halt on economic activity and unpreceden­ted unemployme­nt. Hope for the US lies in the fact that it has the best science infrastruc­ture in the world, which makes it likely that an eventual vaccine will emerge in the country; a resilient private sector and spirit of entreprene­urship, which will help in the recovery; and global economic and strategic dominance, which will allow it to leverage the internatio­nal system. But the crisis has underlined that no one is, quite literally, immune.

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