Dayton Daily News

Standoff ensnares WHO meeting on virus

- By Maria Cheng and Jamey Keaten

Facing the most

GENEVA — disruptive pandemic in generation­s, the technocrat­ic halls of the World Health Organizati­on are now the scene of pitched battles in an increasing­ly bitter proxy war between China and the United States.

At the U.N. health agency’s annual assembly this week, Chinese President Xi Jinping joined by video conference to offer more money and support. Meanwhile, U.S. Pres- ident Donald Trump railed against the WHO in a letter accusing it of covering up the coronaviru­s outbreak with China — and threatenin­g to permanentl­y halt U.S. funding that has been its main financial lifeblood for years.

It marked the latest show- down between the world’s last superpower and the rising Asian giant vying to supplant it on the global stage — this time against the back- drop of a disease that has killed over 300,000 people, left hundreds of millions job- less and ground the world economy to a halt.

For America’s allies in the West and beyond — who have counted on the postwar stability and prosperity that the United States has fostered — the standoff was another gut-check moment about the “America First” leader, now heading into a tough re-election contest.

Lawrence Gostin, director of the WHO Collaborat­ing Center on Health and Human Rights at Georgetown University, said the withdrawal of the U.S. from the global health world would mark a seismic political shift.

“What the U.S. is doing is acting like a bully, making an existentia­l threat to the WHO, and my worry is if the U.S. ever made good on that pledge, the world would splinter,” he said. “This is giving an enormous political prize to China because China has long been looking for a chance to shine on the global stage.”

A U.S. exit would likely weaken the global health agency and leave the U.S. and China to each fund their own projects, Gostin said.

At the assembly that ended Tuesday, European Union leaders tried to strike a middle ground between the two rivals, and the agency’s director-general simply tried to keep the focus on fighting the disease — not each other.

The assembly’s open- ing day Monday was book- ended by two very different messages. On one side, Xi, serene beside the Chinese flag and a landscape mural, called in to say that China would offer $2 billion over two years to help with the COVID-19 response and eco- nomic fallout. He vowed that any vaccine against the disease developed in his coun- try would be made a “global public good.”

On the other, Tr u mp threatened to cut U.S. fund- ing to the WHO for good unless the agency commits to “substantiv­e improve- ments” in the next 30 days, in a letter to agency Direc- tor-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s. It’s not clear what those improve- ments are.

“I cannot allow American taxpayer dollars to continue to finance an organizati­on that, in its present state, is so clearly not serving America’s interests,” Trump wrote.

The U.S. is the biggest WHO donor, providing about $450 million a year.

Europeans looked on aghast.

“Watching the World Health Assembly today was observing the post-American world,” tweeted former Swedish Prime Minister Carl Bildt, co-chair of the European Council on Foreign Relations. “A confident and assertive China with clear strategic approach. A EU trying to rescue what’s left of global cooperatio­n. And a disruptive U.S. more keen on fighting China than fighting COVID19.”

Trump’s threat followed an intense internal debate within the administra­tion between aides intent on eliminatin­g all funding for the WHO and those favoring a more measured response, such as pegging U.S. funding temporaril­y to the level provided by China, according to three U.S. officials familiar with the matter. The officials spoke on condition of ano- nymity because they were not authorized to discuss the issue publicly.

The WHO and other insti- tutions have often drawn criticism from conservati­ves who are part of Trump’s base and disdain U.N.-style inter- nationalis­m.

In the end, Trump reiter- ated a number of accusation­s and complaints that he has publicly made before, such as that the agency’s claims about the virus were “either grossly inaccurate or misleading.”

He also alleged that the WHO had “consistent­ly ignored credible reports of the virus spreading in Wuhan in early December 2019 or even earlier, includ- ing reports from the Lancet medical journal.”

On Tuesday, the Lancet called that characteri­zation “factually incorrect,” noting that the first papers pub- lished on the coronaviru­s did not appear until January.

George Davey Smith, an epidemiolo­gist at the University of Bristol, called Trump’s letter “an undisguise­d polit- ical attack on China.”

WHO acknowledg­ed receipt of the missive and said it was considerin­g it.

Tedros, an Ethiopian who goes by his first name, appeared determined to rise above the new bout of criti- cism, saying “WHO’s focus now is fighting the pandemic with every tool at our disposal.”

Medical experts said the attacks from Trump, who has repeatedly shunned and berated internatio­nal institutio­ns, were hurting the WHO’s ability to protect global health.

Devi Sridhar, a professor of global health at the University of Edinburgh, said the letter was likely written for Trump’s political base and meant to deflect blame for the virus’ devastatin­g impact in the U.S., which has by far the most infections and deaths in the world.

“China and the U.S. are fighting it out like divorced parents while WHO is the child caught in the middle,” she said.

Nonetheles­s, the assembly produced a unanimous resolution — with both China and the U.S. on board — that backs global cooperatio­n to find tools to address COVID19 and evaluate the world’s response, as coordinate­d by WHO, to it.

It wasn’t immediatel­y clear how, when or by whom that evaluation will be conducted. Xi expressed support for a review — but said it should wait until after the pandemic is over.

The European Union, the resolution’s chief architect, urged countries to support the WHO in the wake of Trump’s attacks.

“This is the time for all humanity to rally around a common cause,” European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said.

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