The Sentinel-Record

Pandemic planning becomes political weapon as deaths mount

- DEB RIECHMANN

WASHINGTON — For the first three years of his presidency, Donald Trump did not publicly utter the words “pandemic” or “preparedne­ss.” Not in speeches, rallies or his many news conference­s, planned and impromptu.

But on Friday, the White House pointed to extensive planning exercises the administra­tion conducted and reports it wrote warning of the threat in 2018.

Still, Trump has repeatedly said that the blame for the federal government having inadequate stockpiles of crucial supplies and machines needed to cope with an outbreak lay with his predecesso­r, Barack Obama.

Obama has been a persistent foil for Trump on a number of issues, but in the case of planning for the pandemic he has devoted little attention to the 69-page “playbook” from the Obama administra­tion about the threat of a viral outbreak that might include Ebola or an airborne respirator­y illness like coronaviru­s. And the Obama administra­tion could draw from a similar document written during the administra­tion of George W. Bush in 2006.

The politics of pandemic planning have gotten increasing­ly pitched as the COVID-19 death toll continues to mount in the United States.

Trump claims he inherited a “broken, terrible” system from Obama. Critics counter that Trump had three years in office to prepare — more than enough time to build on the pandemic strategies he inherited.

The friction was laid bare in the Rose Garden and the White House briefing room on Friday.

Trump, at a midday event outside the Oval Office, declared: “I inherited nothing. I inherited practicall­y nothing from the previous administra­tion, unfortunat­ely.”

His spokeswoma­n, Kayleigh McEnany, later displayed a copy of the Obama plan dismissive­ly during a briefing in the White House press room before hoisting two binders of what she called the superior Trump plans.

Beth Cameron, who worked on pandemic planning in the Obama administra­tion, said the playbook that the Obama administra­tion presented to the Trump administra­tion “was given, briefed and discussed with the incoming administra­tion, explicitly.” She said it was intended to provide the White House with a set of questions it should ask early on in an emerging epidemic or pandemic threat.

“It outlined who should come together to answer those questions and to be prepared to anticipate what was coming next … to get moving,” Cameron said. She said the Trump administra­tion was slow to respond to COVID-19 and that Obama’s playbook

could have helped the administra­tion get ahead of an emerging threat like the coronaviru­s.

Cameron said the Bush and Obama administra­tions both did extensive planning for pandemics and many of those plans were passed to the Trump White House. “They were not political. They were non-partisan,” she added.

McEnany styled the Trump administra­tion’s response to

COVID-19 as “unpreceden­ted.” She referred to Obama’s plan as a “thin packet of paper” that was replaced by “two detailed, robust pandemic response reports commission­ed by the Trump administra­tion.”

She said that in 2018 the Trump administra­tion issued its own pandemic crisis action plan and last summer conducted Crimson Contagion 2019, a simulation to test the nation’s ability to respond to a largescale outbreak. In January, the Department of Health and Human Services issued an after-action report.

“This exercise expounded upon — exposed rather — the shortcomin­gs in legacy planning documents, which inform President Trump’s coronaviru­s response beginning as early as January,” McEnany said.

Her comments drew criticism from Ron Klain, who was the U.S. Ebola response coordinato­r during the Obama administra­tion and now advises Democratic presidenti­al hopeful Joe Biden.

“Let’s get to the bottom line,” Klain tweeted after McEnany’s briefing. “If their position now is that they HAD a plan, and that THIS was their plan … I fail to see how that is a helpful argument for them in any way.”

The Trump administra­tion’s

36-page National Biodefense

Strategy, issued in September 2018, was a self-described “call to action.” Among the many goals was bolstering preparedne­ss to save lives through “medical countermea­sures,” such as vaccines, ventilator­s, diagnostic tests and personal protective equipment like medical gowns and masks that were in short supply in the early days of the pandemic.

McEnacy said the nation’s stockpile was insufficie­nt, but didn’t answer questions about why Trump didn’t work to restock it during his first three years in office. The White House said the stockpile had only 28% of the items needed during a pandemic and contained less than a one-month supply of key items, but the administra­tion is updating inventorie­s and how they are distribute­d.

Cameron said Trump had plenty to study when he entered the Oval Office.

Bush took a keen interest in preparing the nation for an influenza pandemic after reading John M. Barry’s “The Great Influenza” about the 1918 influenza that killed more than 500,000 Americans and more than 20 million people across the globe.

He read the book in 2005 while at his Texas ranch. A few months later, Bush gave a speech at the National Institutes of Health rolling out the first modern-day national strategy to prepare for an influenza pandemic, detect outbreaks, expand vaccine production capacity and stockpile treatments.

“Unlike storms or floods, which strike in an instant and then recede, a pandemic can continue spreading destructio­n in repeated waves that can last for a year or more,” Bush said in the November 2005 speech.

Obama worked on the Ebola epidemic and also on H1N1 and the Zika virus. In 2014, Obama stood up the White House’s National Security Council Directorat­e for Global Health Security and Biodefense to coordinate government resources in preparatio­n for the next disease outbreak and prevent it from becoming a pandemic.

There are scores of other pandemic planning books on the shelves, including the Biological Incident Annex, which was updated by the Obama administra­tion and re-issued in January

2017 as Trump took office. The Pandemic Crisis Action Plan from 2018 that McEnany talked about is not online, but a General Accounting Office report references it.

“President Trump has been in office for well over three years now, which is more than enough to build upon the pandemic strategies he inherited,” said Lawrence Gostin, a public health expert at Georgetown University who worked with the Bush and Obama administra­tions on global health issues.

“It’s quite evident that whatever pandemic planning had been done during the Bush or Obama administra­tions never made it to high levels in the Trump administra­tion.”

He thinks Trump was just focused on other issues — that pandemic planning wasn’t a top priority for the president.

Gostin said he was startled when Trump first said that no one expected a pandemic like

COVID-19 to happen. “Well, every global health expert expected this to happen,” Gostin said. “We couldn’t tell you when it would happen. We couldn’t tell you exactly what the pathogen would be, but we always knew that there was a big novel pandemic coming.”

 ?? The Associated Press ?? ROSE GARDEN: President Donald Trump poses for a photo with Girl Scout Troop 744 member Lauren Matney during a recognitio­n ceremony Friday in the Rose Garden of the White House in Washington.
The Associated Press ROSE GARDEN: President Donald Trump poses for a photo with Girl Scout Troop 744 member Lauren Matney during a recognitio­n ceremony Friday in the Rose Garden of the White House in Washington.

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