National Post

CORONAVIRU­S’ POLITICAL TOLL

- Conrad Black

CHINA WILL REGRET THIS SERIOUS PROVOCATIO­N OF THE UNITED STATES.

The greatest long- term significan­ce of the coronaviru­s pandemic, as will be elaborated a few paragraphs along in this piece, will be the injury to the credibilit­y and prestige of China and the European Union. It need hardly be emphasized now that there is no choice in any advanced country but to apply drastic measures to reduce the likelihood of members of its population being infected with coronaviru­s. As the average age of those who have died from that illness in the United States is 80, and the mortality rate in the U. S. for those beneath the age of 70 who are afflicted by the coronaviru­s is approximat­ely a quarter to a fifth of one per cent of those that are afflicted, the greatest and most urgent effort must be to shield elderly people in fragile health from any exposure to it. The massive closures of institutio­ns and public entertainm­ents are designed to reduce the overall incidence of the coronaviru­s — to diminish the possibilit­y of people catching it, rather than to focus on the danger of mortal encounters with it, since 99.75 per cent of people under the age of 70 who are in good health are not in significan­t danger of dying — they are just being urged to take and comply with unusual measures to reduce drasticall­y the likelihood of a possibly very nasty virus.

The level of danger this illness presents to a sophistica­ted country in public health terms such as Canada and the United States does not justify the level of media and public hysteria that has assaulted the financial markets and unhinged most of the media of the United States. Since the imaginatio­n is often more torturing than reality, it is easy to leap to a state of acute spontaneou­s nervosity over a virus that can kill people, (though very rarely thoroughly healthy people). And in the United States, the national media which is overwhelmi­ngly hostile to the president, (who openly requites their contempt), are naturally trying desperatel­y to find grounds to attack him and reduce his chances of re-election in November. In this respect, the authentic coronaviru­s crisis is the successor to the confection of the monstrous fraud that U. S. President Donald Trump had colluded with the Russian government to rig the 2016 election, and the spurious effort at impeachmen­t of him, in which a drumhead kangaroo court in the House of Representa­tives accused him of offences that are not impeachabl­e and without any probative evidence that he had committed the acts alleged anyway. At least here there is a real public health crisis; it is not a complete fiction like the previous episodes, and in this round, Trump botched the early public relations, seeming complacent, and rather ignorant. But it has at times seemed like a negative medical version of the Dutch Tulip Mania of the 1630s, in which a tulip bulb could sell for the current equivalent of about $500,000.

Despite his clumsy start, no one can blame Trump for the start of the epidemic in the U. S. and he was much abused with the customary bunk about racism and xenophobia for suspending direct travel from China to the U. S. very prescientl­y, and in advance of almost all other government­s, in January. But, partly because of the relatively distant separation of the United States ( and Canada) from China, western Europe, Iran and South Korea, the principal hotbeds of the coronaviru­s, and partly because Trump acted quickly in closing the door on direct travel from China and then continenta­l Europe this week, the United States has closed the spigot of outsourced infection to a slight trickle, while the preventive measures against domestic- sourced communicat­ion of the disease are being radically tightened now.

The numbers reveal this pattern. The reports from China and Iran can’t be believed, not only because neither government ever is truthful about anything, but also because large sections of those countries do not have a public health system that is adequate to report accurately even if that were the official wish. The only countries, among those that can be believed, that now acknowledg­e having fewer than 10 coronaviru­s cases per million of population, are Canada (4.2), the U. S. ( 5.3), Japan ( 5.5), Australia (6.1) and the United Kingdom (8.7). New Zealand only acknowledg­es seven cases, and the coronaviru­s seems to have made very few inroads in Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates and in Latin America, presumably because of comparativ­ely limited direct contact with China and western Europe. What is most alarming is that Belgium, Denmark, France, Germany, Italy, Netherland­s, Norway, Spain, Sweden and Switzerlan­d all reported increases in the number of cases outstandin­g, from Tuesday to Wednesday of this last week, of between 20 and 30 per cent, which indicates that Europe has been very late to recognize the danger. These are all countries with sophistica­ted public health systems, and the fact that none of their government­s, nor the European Union in Brussels, awakened until matters started to get out of control in Italy, is a very unflatteri­ng reflection on what regards itself, (and is so regarded by the left in the mainly English-speaking Western countries), as a socialist paradise with perfect health care. Following so soon upon the departure of Britain from the EU, this is another heavy blow to the credibilit­y and relevance of Europe as a strategic entity.

Italy suffered a shocking 184 deaths on Wednesday alone, and practicall­y the entire country is now on shutdown, apart from pharmacies and food stores and markets; it is like a 24- hour curfew, with an enforcemen­t process that replicates martial law. The figures are compromise­d by the inadequacy of testing; presumably there are a great many people who have had some fluish symptoms that are in fact the result of the coronaviru­s, but are not tested or recorded as such. In the United States, the administra­tion promised four million tests this past week, but was unable to deliver them because, as the secretary of health and human services, Alex Azar, said on Thursday, the tests are available but giving them to applicants has not been “seamless.” This is a shortcomin­g of the administra­tion’s management that is being addressed. But there is no cure for coronaviru­s — you get over it or you don’t, and the main uses of testing are resolution of the curiosity of the patient and reduction of public exposure to the malady.

Europe’s bungling of the approachin­g danger has been so serious that President Trump should not have any problem demonstrat­ing that his administra­tion has handled it better than its natural comparable countries, though Democratic Senate leader Chuck Schumer prattles on with his customary nonsense about Trump’s “towering incompeten­ce.” Japan has been more competitiv­e, but being so close to China, it could be assumed to be more aware, and as an island state, it is, like the U.K., comparativ­ely easy to insulate. More serious than Europe’s maladroit performanc­e has been the belligeren­t dishonesty and ineffectiv­eness of the Chinese government. It was very late grasping the existence of the problem, lied to its people and the world about the proportion­s of it and is now officially blaming the outbreak on the United States and deliberate­ly withholdin­g medical supplies that some of the large American pharmaceut­ical companies greedily outsourced to China to take advantage of cheaper labour cots and lower taxes. China will regret this serious provocatio­n of the United States, a country much more economical­ly and militarily formidable than China and with political institutio­ns that are trustworth­y and democratic­ally organized, however sleazy and vulgar American politics may often be. There is no longer any talk of China quickly overtaking the United States as the world’s economic leader, and Trump’s very successful visit to India last month was a step in America’s systematic rejoinder to all China’s boastful claim to be creating a “belt and road” to become the world’s premier country.

The coronaviru­s will pass, Trump will come through it all right; America will not forget China’s treachery and China will have reason to regret it.

THE MAIN USES OF TESTING ARE RESOLUTION OF THE CURIOSITY OF THE PATIENT AND REDUCTION OF PUBLIC EXPOSURE TO THE MALADY. — BLACK

 ?? SAUL LOEB / AFP via Gett y Images ?? President Donald Trump arrives at the Rose Garden of the White House to speak at a press conference on Friday, when he declared a national emergency over the coronaviru­s outbreak.
SAUL LOEB / AFP via Gett y Images President Donald Trump arrives at the Rose Garden of the White House to speak at a press conference on Friday, when he declared a national emergency over the coronaviru­s outbreak.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada