Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Doing our part

- Victor Davis Hanson Victor Davis Hanson is a classicist and historian at the Hoover Institutio­n, Stanford University.

Acurrent global myth alleges that America under the Trump administra­tion is not leading the world fight against the coronaviru­s in its accustomed role as postwar global leader.

Yet the U.S. was the first major nation to issue a travel ban on flights from China, with Donald Trump making that announceme­nt on Jan. 31. That was a bold act. It likely saved thousands endangered by Chinese perfidy and soon became a global model. None of the ban’s loud critics are today demanding it be rescinded.

In typically American fashion, as we have seen in crises from Pearl Harbor to 9/11, after initial shock and unprepared­ness, the U.S. economic and scientific juggernaut is kicking into action.

Already the U.S. is transition­ing from a long, disastrous reliance on Chinese medical supplies and pharmaceut­icals. In ad hoc fashion, companies are gearing up massive production of masks, ventilator­s and key anti-viral supplies.

The number of known deaths from the virus—for now the only reliable data available—shows a fatality rate of about 7-8 per million people in the United States. That per capita toll is analogous to Germany’s and one of the lowest in the world among larger nations.

The U.S. economy in 2019—with its near-record-low unemployme­nt, inflation and interest rates—was the most robust in the world. It will soon be the key to rebooting global production and trade.

Confrontin­g China over patent and copyright theft, technologi­cal appropriat­ion, dumping and currency manipulati­on was not just in the U.S. interest, but for the global good.

A reckless and disingenuo­us China poses an existentia­l threat to countries across the globe. The only world bulwark against Chinese propaganda and bullying remains U.S. economic and military power.

Despite accusation­s of growing isolationi­sm at a time of a worldwide pandemic, the U.S. still stations 200,000-250,000 troops abroad. Those assets ensure that no hostile power in the present crisis will opportunis­tically threaten European and Asian democracie­s.

Record U.S. natural gas and oil production have helped lower global home heating and transporta­tion costs. Among the biggest beneficiar­ies are Europe and Japan, the largest customers for Russia and the Middle East’s unreliable energy production.

The radical increase in American natural gas production­s helps explain why the U.S. has made more progress in reducing carbon emissions than the signatorie­s of the Paris climate accord. That voluntary agreement has had little success in curbing the planet’s largest carbon emitters. Even as the U.S. registered robust economic growth of nearly 2.5 percent, it nonetheles­s reduced its carbon emissions by 0.5 percent in 2017 (the latest year for which data are available), which was the largest reduction in the world.

The truth is that the free world would be a safer and more secure place if Europe, not the U.S., acted more responsibl­y. Individual European Union countries have junked their utopian EU brotherhoo­d and are reverting to nationalis­t self-interests.

Fracking natural gas, with less reliance of coal-fired power plants, might have allowed European nations to meet their Paris climate accord promises.

Italy and other European countries have been especially vulnerable to Chinese mercantile pressure and have mortgaged their economic futures to Beijing, with disastrous results.

If the European Union produced more of its own gas and oil, it would not empower Moscow and the Middle East through its colossal importatio­n of their energy.

And if NATO countries just met their obligation to spend 2 percent of their gross domestic product on defense, then the West would not be so vulnerable in such times of crisis. NATO nations could more effectivel­y draw on their military and health resources to fight the virus.

Where the West is deficient is in the current lack of imaginatio­n of its most hallowed institutio­ns. Universiti­es in the United States and Europe are in suspension. They currently have hundreds of thousands of empty dorm rooms. Why not offer them as temporary refuges to the vulnerable homeless and poor?

Given the epidemic of misinforma­tion, millions need accurate data. But poor readers are barricaded from major news websites by expensive firewalls. Required subscripti­ons could be temporaril­y waived, at least for any articles that offer key informatio­n concerning the coronaviru­s.

Throughout the outbreak, the media have promulgate­d sensationa­lism and helped fan the hysteria. It could better use its muckraking journalist­s to police itself.

Any laxity in fighting the virus is not to be found with the U.S., but rather with its loudest and most opportunis­tic critics.

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