Bangkok Post

US, CHINA IN GEOPOLITIC­AL RACE TO DEVELOP VACCINE

Talk of global collaborat­ion in quest to find cure for Covid-19 shoved aside as national interests come first.

- By Marc Champion

When the Soviet Union put the first man into space in 1961, the shock to America’s self-confidence was electric. If China should be first to produce a successful vaccine against the coronaviru­s, US prestige is likely to suffer a similar blow.

President Donald Trump is putting everything he has into a research effort dubbed Operation Warp Speed, which pulls together pharmaceut­ical companies, government agencies and the military. So is China, which has a head start at a time the two countries are already engaged in a fight for dominance affecting everything from trade to the roll-out of 5G communicat­ions networks.

The stakes in finding a vaccine against the coronaviru­s couldn’t be higher. In just a few months the disease has claimed more than a quarter of a million lives and shattered economies worldwide.

While many leaders are talking about global collaborat­ion, history suggests that national interests will dominate — the government that can immunise its workforce first stands to gain not just economic advantage, but the validation of its technologi­cal prowess and internatio­nal influence. If that government is in Beijing, the impact could be as dramatic as Yuri Gagarin’s trip into orbit almost 60 years ago.

“When it’s tense like it is now between the US and China, every single thing gets distorted by the geopolitic­s,” said David Fidler, a specialist in cybersecur­ity and global health at the New York-based Council on Foreign Relations. Should Beijing produce the first vaccine, the US “will worry that China would weaponise the vaccine in geopolitic­al terms,” he said.

Both the US and China have played down talk of competitio­n, with Chinese officials, in particular, stressing the common nature of the threat from Covid-19. No vaccine has ever been made on the kinds of schedules being targeted, counted in months rather than years. Scientists familiar with the process warn it isn’t certain that one can be developed at all, let alone by the end of the year. So the risk of disappoint­ment is high.

In a recent town hall on Fox News, Mr Trump said the US was working with both Britain and Australia on vaccine projects and wasn’t focussed on who got there first. “I really don’t care,” he said. “If it’s another country, I’ll take my hat off to them. We have to come up with a vaccine.” Health Secretary Alex Azar said last week the US expects to be able to start manufactur­ing the drugs itself, whoever makes the scientific breakthrou­gh.

Still, in the first months of the pandemic, signs of geopolitic­al rivalry have been there for all to see, and trust lacking even among allies. The state government in Berlin accused the US of “modern piracy,” for allegedly snatching away shipments of Chinese protective gear earmarked for Germany, a claim denied by the US.

The Europeans are bringing in new rules to protect their pharmaceut­ical firms from foreign acquisitio­ns. China has irritated Western government­s with highly publicised airlifts of medical aid to selected countries and suggestion­s its success in containing the virus is proof of a superior political system.

The US is signalling that its own efforts are focused on protecting the American people first. Vice President Mike Pence on Tuesday described the US vaccine programme as aiming “to develop a vaccine for the people of the

United States.”

The administra­tion is targeting 300 million doses — enough to inoculate most of the country — by January.

China’s research process is, for now, more advanced, with a total of 508 volunteers joining a second phase trial for a potential vaccine that the Chinese Academy of Military Medical Sciences is developing with a Tianjin-based company, CanSino Biologics. Results from the trial could be known as soon as this month.

Russia has at least four vaccine projects underway, including at Novosibirs­k Vector, a laboratory that once worked on Soviet bio-weapons programmes, according to Sergei Netesov, a former executive at the lab who now teaches at Novosibirs­k State University.

The goal, he says, is for Russia to make sure its own population has protection without being dependent on its rivals.

Others are in the mix, too, with the UK saying that if a promising Oxford

University project is successful, Britons will be at the front to the line. To be sure, France and Germany are leading the charge for a more cooperativ­e approach, securing pledges of 7.4 billion euro ($8 billion) at a virtual Group of Twenty fundraiser on May 4.

The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, meanwhile, has said it will build manufactur­ing capacity to make as many seven vaccines available, even before they exist, an unpreceden­ted effort to ensure wide and rapid availabili­ty.

“This pandemic is a global challenge and we will therefore also only be able to overcome it globally,” German Chancellor Angela Merkel said at the G-20 video conference. “We are ready to go new ways.”

But past experience isn’t encouragin­g. During the 2009 H1N1 flu epidemic, government­s also issued joint declaratio­ns committing themselves to collaborat­ion in the developmen­t and distributi­on of vaccines.

Neverthele­ss, as soon as they were available, countries that could afford to bought up doses and hoarded them, to ensure their population­s would get inoculated first.

The US snubbed Monday’s G-20 vaccine initiative, objecting to the involvemen­t of the World Health Organizati­on, while officials in both Washington and Beijing have indulged in conspiracy theories and blame games to accuse the other of responsibi­lity for the virus.

Mr Trump has blamed the WHO for failing to prevent the spread of the coronaviru­s and halted US funding to the organisati­on.

China is emerging first from its lockdown to reboot its economy, while the US and Europe are still struggling to contain the virus and piling on vast sums of national debt to cushion the economic impact, risking long periods of slow growth ahead.

Even the G-20 leadership of Ms Merkel and French President Emmanuel Macron is in part designed to compensate for the failure of the European Union’s collective response to the coronaviru­s so far, says Stefan Lehne, a visiting scholar at Carnegie Europe, a Brussels-based think tank.

Perceived German and EU failures to help Italy early in the crisis caused resentment and opened a diplomatic window for China and Russia, both of which sent high profile shipments of medical aid to Italy.

“Bill Gates said this is like a world war and we are all on the same side,” says Mr Lehne. “This is not so evident.”

 ??  ?? RACE FOR A CURE: Daniel O’Day, head of Gilead Sciences, manufactur­er of remdesivir, stands in-between Vice President Mike Pence and President Donald Trump as they discuss the US bid to find a vaccine.
RACE FOR A CURE: Daniel O’Day, head of Gilead Sciences, manufactur­er of remdesivir, stands in-between Vice President Mike Pence and President Donald Trump as they discuss the US bid to find a vaccine.

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