USA TODAY International Edition

Trump’s COVID happy talk

Echoes of ‘ Mission Accomplish­ed’

- Bill Sternberg Bill Sternberg is the editor of the editorial page.

Back in 2003, the George W. Bush administra­tion was publicly expressing optimism about the wars in Afghanista­n and Iraq. That May 1, Bush memorably stood under a “Mission Accomplish­ed” banner on the USS Abraham Lincoln aircraft carrier and proclaimed that the United States and its allies had vanquished Saddam Hussein’s regime.

The victory declaratio­n was premature, to say the least. Inside both nations, deadly insurgenci­es were building. Five months after the “Mission Accomplish­ed” speech, USA TODAY Pentagon reporter Dave Moniz got his hands on an internal memo from Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld to his top aides. “The coalition can win in Afghanista­n and Iraq in one way or another,” Rumsfeld wrote, “but it will be a long, hard slog.”

Indeed. The Iraq War turned into one of the biggest debacles in the history of American foreign policy, and U. S. troops remain bogged down in Afghanista­n nearly two decades after the Sept. 11 attacks.

Rumsfeld’s memo comes to mind whenever I hear the happy talk coming from the Trump administra­tion about the coronaviru­s pandemic. Even as the president trumpets success in the battle against COVID- 19, the disease is making a swift and stealthy comeback across America’s Sun Belt.

To listen to Trump, the “invisible enemy” has been routed. He has promoted magical thinking ( saying the virus is “dying out” and “fading away”), quick fixes ( recommendi­ng hydroxychl­oroquine) and quack remedies ( musing about bleach and disinfecta­nt).

Desperate for the adoration of crowds, the president has put his most fervent supporters at risk of contractin­g a deadly disease. Future historians will undoubtedl­y look back in astonishme­nt at his large indoor rallies recently in Tulsa and Phoenix, masks and social distancing be damned in the middle of a pandemic.

Now 4 major epicenters

Trump isn’t the only top administra­tion official guilty of painting overly rosy scenarios. In late April, Vice President Mike Pence, head of the White House Coronaviru­s Task Force, had his own “Mission Accomplish­ed” moment, predicting that “by Memorial Day weekend we will have this coronaviru­s epidemic behind us.”

Well, now we are past the Fourth of July weekend, and the numbers are telling a very different story. Case counts are surging to record levels across the South and West. Deaths have topped 130,000. The United States, with about 4% of the world’s population, has nearly 25% of the reported COVID- 19 fatalities.

Outside the White House bubble, public health officials are expressing alarm at the latest surge in cases.

“We’re right back where we were at the peak of the epidemic during the New York outbreak,” Dr. Scott Gottlieb, who served as commission­er of the Food and Drug Administra­tion earlier in the Trump administra­tion, said Sunday on CBS News’ “Face the Nation.” “The difference now is that we really had one epicenter of spread when New York was going through its hardship. Now we really have four major epicenters of spread: Los Angeles, cities in Texas, cities in Florida, and Arizona.”

“We are still knee- deep in the first wave of this,” Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nation’s leading infectious disease specialist, said Monday. “We’re surging back up, so it’s a serious situation that we have to address immediatel­y.”

The White House clamps down

Tellingly, Fauci made his candid comments in a webcast interview with his boss, National Institutes of Health Director Francis Collins, not on a network or cable news program. Since Trump pivoted to economic reopening, the White House has clamped down on national TV appearance­s by federal health officials.

“Face the Nation” host Margaret Brennan said the show has been trying for three months to book Fauci. USA TODAY’s Editorial Board, which has been meeting with a series of COVID- 19 epidemiolo­gists, has been seeking for many weeks to arrange interviews with the surgeon general and top officials at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Fauci assured the public Monday that “science will get us through this.” It will, but how long will that take?

The question evokes another of Rumsfeld’s classic utterances: “There are known knowns; there are things we know we know. We also know there are known unknowns; that is to say, we know there are some things we do not know.”

In the case of COVID- 19, we do not know how long it will take to develop a vaccine or a cure. Already, death rates are declining because treatment protocols are improving; sooner or later, humanity will prevail over this novel and highly contagious pathogen. In the meantime, it will be a long, hard slog.

 ?? BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/ AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? President Donald Trump tours a factory that produces N95 masks on May 5 in Phoenix.
BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/ AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES President Donald Trump tours a factory that produces N95 masks on May 5 in Phoenix.

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