Ebola battle: Obama deploys troops

President Barack Obama speaks about West Africa's Ebola crisis at the Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in Atlanta on September 16, 2014. Picture: Pablo Martinez Monsivais

President Barack Obama speaks about West Africa's Ebola crisis at the Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in Atlanta on September 16, 2014. Picture: Pablo Martinez Monsivais

Published Sep 17, 2014

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Atlanta/Monrovia - President Barack Obama on Tuesday called West Africa's deadly Ebola outbreak a looming threat to global security and announced a major expansion of the US role in trying to halt its spread, including deployment of 3 000 troops to the region.

“The reality is that this epidemic is going to get worse before it gets better,” Obama said at the Atlanta headquarters of the US Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

“But, right now, the world still has an opportunity to save countless lives. Right now, the world has the responsibility to act, to step up and to do more. The United States of America intends to do more,” he added.

The US plan, a dramatic expansion of Washington's initial response last week, won praise from the UN World Health Organisation, aid workers and officials in West Africa. Experts said it was still not enough to contain the epidemic, which is rapidly spreading and has caused already-weak local public health systems to buckle under the strain of fighting it.

US officials said the focus of the military deployment would be Liberia, a nation founded by freed American slaves that is the hardest hit of the countries affected by the crisis.

Obama's plan calls for sending 3 000 troops, including engineers and medical personnel; establishing a regional command and control centre in Liberia's capital, Monrovia, commanded by Major General Darryl Williams, who arrived there on Tuesday; and forming a staging area in Senegal to help distribute personnel and aid on the ground.

It also calls for building 17 treatment centres with 100 beds each; placing US Public Health Service personnel in new field hospitals in Liberia; training thousands of healthcare workers for six months or longer; and creating an “air bridge” to get health workers and medical supplies into West Africa more quickly.

Late on Tuesday, an Obama administration official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the Defence Department would ask Congress to approve another $500 million in funds to be reallocated from fiscal 2014 to help cover the mission's costs.

Added to the $500 billion sought earlier to be moved from the previous fiscal year for Ebola and fighting Islamic State militants in Iraq, up to $1 billion would be available to be spent on the Ebola response.

This was separate from $175 million already dedicated to the effort, and $88 million being sought in Congress this week as a stopgap measure, the official noted.

The worst Ebola outbreak since the disease was identified in 1976 has already killed nearly 2 500 people and is threatening to spread elsewhere in Africa.

Obama said “the world is looking to us” to take the lead against Ebola, but urged other nations also to take action because the epidemic is “spiralling out of control” and “people are literally dying in the streets”.

The White House said the troops will not be responsible for direct patient care. Amid concern about infections, Obama said the “safety of our personnel will remain a top priority”. He also said the “chances of an Ebola outbreak here in the United States are extremely low”.

Obama said that if the outbreak is not stopped now, hundreds of thousands of people may become infected, “with profound political and economic and security implications for all of us”.

“This is an epidemic that is not just a threat to regional security. It's a potential threat to global security, if these countries break down, if their economies break down, if people panic. That has profound effects on all of us, even if we are not directly contracting the disease,” Obama added.

The WHO praised the US plan for providing support to the United Nations and other international partners to help authorities in Guinea, Liberia, Sierra Leone, Nigeria and Senegal contain the outbreak.

“This massive ramp-up of support from the United States is precisely the kind of transformational change we need to get a grip on the outbreak and begin to turn it around,” Dr Margaret Chan, the WHO's director-general, said in a statement.

Earlier, a senior WHO official said the Ebola outbreak requires a much faster response to limit its spread to tens of thousands of cases.

“We don't know where the numbers are going on this,” WHO Assistant Director-General Bruce Aylward told a news conference in Geneva, calling the crisis “unparalleled in modern times”.

The initial US response last week had focused on providing funding and supplies, drawing criticism from aid workers for not deploying manpower as in other disasters like earthquakes.

Obama's announcement marks his second within a week of a new mission for the US military, following last week's speech outlining a broad escalation of the campaign against the Islamic State militant group in Iraq and Syria.

During a congressional hearing in Washington, CDC official Beth Bell said the “window of opportunity” to control Ebola's spread is closing, while both Democratic and Republican lawmakers voiced support for funding the fight against the virus.

“We need to declare a war on Ebola,” Republican Senator Jerry Moran said.

Liberians hailed the word that US troops were coming, recalling a military operation in 2003 that helped stabilise the country during a civil war.

“This is welcome news. This is what we expected from the US a long time ago,” Anthony Mulbah, a student at the University of Monrovia, said in the dilapidated oceanfront capital. “The US remains a strong partner to Liberia.”

In Liberia, a shortage of space in clinics for isolating victims means patients are being turned away, then infecting others.

Ebola spreads rapidly, causes fever and uncontrolled bleeding.

The virus has so far killed 2 461 people, half of the 4 985 people infected, and the death toll has doubled in the past month, the WHO's Aylward said.

The outbreak was first confirmed in the remote forests of southeastern Guinea in March, then spread across Sierra Leone and Liberia. A handful of Ebola deaths have been recorded in Nigeria, Africa's most populous country.

The disease has crippled weak health systems, infecting hundreds of local staff in a region chronically short of doctors. The WHO has said that 500 to 600 more foreign experts and at least 10 000 more local health workers are needed.

“It is not enough to provide protective clothing when you don't have the people who will wear them,” Ghana's President John Dramani Mahama said during a visit to Sierra Leone.

The US intervention comes as the pace of cash and emergency supplies dispatched to the region accelerates.

Before Tuesday, Washington had sent about 100 health officials and committed some $175 million in aid. Other nations, including Cuba, China, France and Britain; have pledged medical workers, health centres and other forms of support.

Critics, including regional leaders, former UN leader Kofi Annan and Peter Piot, one of the scientists who discovered Ebola in 1976; have said international efforts so far have fallen woefully short.

“It is now up to other governments to equally scale up their support in Sierra Leone and Guinea,” Piot, now director of the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, told Reuters.

Many neighbouring African countries have closed their borders and cancelled flights to affected countries, making the humanitarian response more difficult.

A draft UN Security Council resolution on Ebola, obtained by Reuters, calls on UN member states, particularly in the region, to lift general travel and border restrictions. The resolution could win approval later this week. - Reuters

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