Boston Herald

America unfairly blamed despite vax successes

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When it comes to handling the COVID-19 pandemic, America can’t seem to do anything right, at least as far as most of the world is concerned. Now that the vaccine rollout is proving less disastrous than we were promised it would be, it turns out our success is a problem, too.

“We’ve done worse than most any other country,” Dr Anthony Fauci said in an ABC news interview last week.

Trump’s response to the crisis, originally decried as “xenophobic,” including by the current president, has now been reframed as woefully inadequate.

The world sees the high rates of death in the U.S. and blames Trump, their favorite villain, along with a poor understand­ing of science and a lack of maskwearin­g (despite plenty of evidence that the U.S. ranks higher than many European countries in mask compliance.)

The measures that seem to do the best at controllin­g the crisis, like strict, mandatory isolation and travel restrictio­ns, and hyper-vigilant surveillan­ce and contact tracing, are simply not feasible in a nation as large, diverse and free as the United States.

But this story is not yet over, and the common narrative that Americans have done a terrible job containing the virus may end up nullified by the ultimate results of a historical­ly rapid and successful vaccinatio­n program.

In the fall, when then-President Trump promised an effective vaccine in December, Democrats and the media called his words irresponsi­ble and dangerous.

But Operation Warp Speed came through with spectacula­r efficacy results for not one, but two mRNA vaccines, which both gained approval before the end of the year.

Before President Biden took office, the U.S. had already reached a rate of a million vaccines administer­ed in a single day. Less than three months after the vaccines were approved, more than 13% of the population has now received at least one dose, with another approved vaccine option, Johnson & Johnson, coming soon.

America now ranks among the top nations in the world for vaccine administra­tion, and is by far the largest country to do so. By the end of the summer, every American adult will have had the opportunit­y to receive the vaccine. This is a success story that will doubtless prove incredibly important in containing future waves of the pandemic in the coming months.

Now the criticism is that the U.S. is selfishly hoarding vaccines to use for Americans, while poorer countries around the world will stay unvaccinat­ed for months and maybe for years to come.

And despite the U.S. pledging billions of dollars to COVAX, a program that allows poorer nations to access the vaccine, WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s dismissed this as inadequate, saying, “If there are no vaccines to buy, money is irrelevant.”

Experts say the U.S. has a moral obligation to donate not just cash, but the vaccine doses themselves to developing nations, even before their own population is fully vaccinated. This is wrong.

The fact is that without the wealth of the United States being channeled into the effort last year, there would be no vaccines to buy at all. For anyone. In less than a year, the United States was able to coordinate what amounts to a medical miracle, a miracle that will benefit the entire world and save countless lives. In six months time, the U.S. will doubtless be in a position to shore up vaccine supplies for COVAX, once our own citizens have been protected.

This achievemen­t is one that should be celebrated, not downplayed or denounced as unethical.

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