The Mercury News

What a potential European COVID-19 ban of United States travelers reveals

- By Trudy Rubin Philadelph­ia Inquirer Trudy Rubin is a Philadelph­ia Inquirer columnist. © 2020, Philadelph­ia Inquirer. Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency.

As European Union countries rush to reopen their borders Wednesday, they have readied lists of feckless countries whose citizens will be unwelcome. Those countries all have leaders who have failed to contain COVID-19.

Guess who tops the list? Travelers from the United States, where case numbers are soaring (and not just due to increased tests), will be banned because of fear they will spread the virus.

Even more humiliatin­g, Americans are lumped together with citizens of Russia and Brazil, the club of COVID-19 losers that leads the world in infections, with the United States taking an enormous lead. Citizens of China, Vietnam and Cuba, on the other hand, are among the many countries now controllin­g the virus that will be welcome in Europe. Meantime, Beijing stands ready to capitalize globally on signs of American incompeten­ce.

No one should underestim­ate the blow to U.S. prestige of our continued failure to test, trace and contain the virus.

The Europeans recognize the global threat posed by America’s COVID-19 chaos and by a U.S. president who thinks the virus will magically vanish. Once admired around the world for scientific prowess, our country stumbles, leaderless, in full sight of an unbelievin­g world.

In a sane world, the European ban would shock GOP leaders into finally pressing President Trump and recalcitra­nt governors to take basic steps toward containing the virus — like mandatory masking and a national testing and tracing strategy.

But we may have to wait for November to try to restore sanity, along with a coherent national effort to control the virus. That wait will guarantee thousands of unnecessar­y virus deaths and a much harder economic recovery, along with a further drop in U.S. influence abroad.

Either way, it is essential to recognize what the Europe ban on Americans reveals.

The reaction there is largely one of astonishme­nt that the U.S. could be so inept. “I certainly would not feel safe traveling to the U.S.,” a columnist for Italy’s La Repubblica told Bloomberg News, echoing what I’ve heard from colleagues in Europe.

Think about that. “Not safe” visiting the USA, and not just due to gun violence, but because we can’t cope with a pandemic that most European nations have controlled for now.

And then there is astonishme­nt at American behavior. A Bloomberg columnist in Singapore wrote: “Hovering over all this is incredulit­y that the U.S., which most here still see as a great nation and important counterwei­ght to China, is engaged in a culture war over something so straightfo­rward as wearing a mask.”

It is particular­ly shameful for the United States to be grouped with Brazil and Russia as the world’s leading virus threesome. Not so surprising when you consider the similariti­es between Trump and two leaders he admires, Brazil’s Jair Bolsonaro and Russia’s Vladimir Putin. These three populists all have a hard time coping with a real virus enemy they can’t see.

Bolsonaro, a staunch Trump ally who has two sons under investigat­ion for corruption, has spent months disparagin­g the threat of the virus. Refusing to mask, he was just ordered by a judge to wear one when he appears in public.

Meantime, Putin just presided over a massive military parade celebratin­g the 75th anniversar­y of Russia’s victory over Germany — the kind of martial military display of Trump’s dreams. Thousands of soldiers marched shoulder to shoulder without masks.

European leaders stayed away from this virus petri dish of a parade, but Putin no doubt hoped it would eclipse growing public concern over more than 600,000 cases in the world’s third-hardest-hit country. Experts disparage Russia’s minimal death statistics (around 8,500 deaths) as totally unreliable, with a surge in deaths attributed to other causes.

The neon-lit message from the European ban is that we don’t want to be in the club of badly behaved nations, just as we shouldn’t be atop the statistics for coronaviru­s cases and deaths. There is no reason America should be behaving like Brazil or Russia.

As Florida Republican Sen. Marco Rubio put it, “Everyone should just wear a damn mask.” That is the sane response. But so long as Trump mocks masks at rallies, and GOP governors like Florida’s Ron Desantis refuse to order masking, we will deserve to be banned from Europe.

And so long as Trump rejects his own science advisers along with any national testing strategy, we will top the global list of shame, until November at least.

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