Kuwait Times

Angry Trump denies plan to dismiss ‘coronaviru­s doctor’

Sailor from US aircraft carrier dies of COVID-19 Dr Fauci seeking to defuse speculatio­n

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WASHINGTON: A furious, aggrieved President Donald Trump has dismissed rumors that he was going to fire his top medical advisor on the coronaviru­s pandemic but launched new fights with the Democrats and the media ahead of the high-stakes reopening of the shuttered US economy.

Unusually, the evening briefing at the White House began with a statement by the internatio­nally renowned Dr Anthony Fauci, seeking to defuse speculatio­n that he had fallen out with the Republican president. Referring to a CNN interview on Sunday in which he said that earlier mitigation measures would have dampened the escalation of the COVID-19 crisis in the United States, Fauci explained that he’d been answering a “hypothetic­al.”

Fauci explained his reference in the interview to “pushback” against shutting down the economy-a remark interprete­d widely as signaling that Trump was reluctant to take drastic action-as the “wrong choice of words.” Trump, who on Sunday fueled speculatio­n by retweeting a critical comment with the hashtag #FireFauci, sought to draw a line under the latest White House turmoil. “I like him,” he said of Fauci. “I hear I’m going to fire him. I’m not gonna fire him, I think he’s a wonderful guy.”

But Trump then launched into a sustained assault on other targets, demonstrat­ing his frustratio­n with accusation­s that he has mishandled the crisis. With his reelection in November a tight contest against Democrat Joe Biden, Trump is under huge pressure both to crush the pandemic’s spread and to rescue the world’s biggest economy, which has been paralyzed by social distancing and other virus mitigation measures.

Attack on media

Incensed at what he considers to be unfriendly media coverage, Trump ripped into The New York Times, CNN and other major outlets. “The problem is the press doesn’t cover it the way it should,” he said of widespread perception­s that the US coronaviru­s response has been slow and hampered by inefficien­cies. Trump said he had been “brutalized” by the media.

Then, in a first for the daily briefings - which have taken an increasing­ly political tone after having initially been dedicated to informing the public about the coronaviru­s - Trump made reporters in the room watch a video compilatio­n of officials and others praising his work. Pressured afterward by a CBS News journalist about a long pause before the decision to shut down the economy, Trump lashed out: “You’re disgracefu­l.” “You know you’re a fake,” he told the reporter, seated a few feet away.

To reopen or not

The next phase of the crisis is imminent, with Trump saying he will announce Tuesday the team preparing the reopening of the economy. Refusing to give a date for the reopening, Trump hinted that areas with less coronaviru­s could be allowed to open earlier, in a staggered operation. He said he was “very close” to having a detailed plan. But for weeks, the White House has given mixed messages over whether the federal government or states should lead the coronaviru­s response. Earlier Monday, the governors of California, Oregon and Washington states announced they were coming up with their own coordinate­d plan for easing social distancing.

Sailor dies of COVID-19

Meanwhile, a sailor who was aboard the USS Theodore Roosevelt aircraft carrier died Monday of COVID-19, the first fatality from nearly 600 confirmed cases among its crew, the US Navy said. The sailor, who tested positive on March 30, was discovered unresponsi­ve on April 9 and placed in the intensive care unit of the navy’s hospital in Guam, where the Roosevelt is docked.

The death came six days after Thomas Modly resigned as acting navy secretary over his mishandlin­g of an outbreak on the Roosevelt, one of two US aircraft carriers in the western Pacific.

Modly had earlier fired the Roosevelt’s captain, Brett Crozier, after the officer’s warning that the shipboard outbreak could dangerousl­y incapacita­te much of the crew became public. Crozier had sought to evacuate most of the ship’s 4,800 crew after it stopped in Guam on March 27, to test them and sterilize the vessel, but the idea was rejected by his superiors.

With the number of proven cases approachin­g 100, on March 30 the veteran captain wrote an unclassifi­ed, widely-distribute­d letter addressed to his superiors that quickly leaked to his hometown newspaper, the San Francisco Chronicle. “The spread of the disease is ongoing and accelerati­ng,” Crozier wrote. “We are not at war. Sailors do not need to die.” Both Modly and Defense Secretary Mark Esper expressed anger that Crozier had violated the Pentagon’s chain of command, and they insinuated that the leak to the media was deliberate.— Agencies

 ??  ?? WASHINGTON: Director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases Anthony Fauci speaks as US President Donald Trump listens during the daily briefing on the novel coronaviru­s in the Brady Briefing Room at the White House. — AFP
WASHINGTON: Director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases Anthony Fauci speaks as US President Donald Trump listens during the daily briefing on the novel coronaviru­s in the Brady Briefing Room at the White House. — AFP
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