siriusbark | This is a long con. It’s not a short con. The long con takes years
and years to unfold. Of course, in the grand scheme of history, this is a
relatively short con – but with respect to terms of office at 1600
Pennsylvania Avenue, this is a truly long con. In the past fifteen
years, there have been two massive genocidal events on the continent of
Africa. The United States of America has not intervened in any way shape
or form in either event: Rwanda in the 1990’s and today in Congo.
The government of the United States does not, has not, and will not
have an authentic humanitarian interest in Africa. How will “emerging
infectious diseases” become a cornerstone of American foreign policy in
Africa? Simple. It already has.
Nicolas King, in Security, Disease, Commerce: Ideologies of Postcolonial Global Health
(Social Studies of Science, Vol. 32, No. 5/6, pp. 763-789) writes of
the emergence of a “worldview” as far back as 1989 at the National
Institutes of Health and Rockefeller University. In May of that year,
these entities co-sponsored a conference on “emerging viruses” and the
selected experts included Robert E. Shope, Joshua Lederberg and Alfred
S. Evans. According to King, Shope and Lederberg would carve out leading
spaces at the table in defining this issue. In 1992, they authored Emerging Infections: Microbial Threats to Health in the United States. The
report argued that the US was no longer insulated from the
international threat of viruses…that global interdependence, modern
transportation, trade and changing social and cultural patterns were all
bases for the threat. For King (who provides far more detail than space
allows here), these scholarly formulations echoed the old colonial
frameworks of a century ago. Moreover, these works suggested a new basis
for Western intrusions into Africa, Asia and Latin America.
Quoting from King:
“To address this risk, the report recommended the expansion and financial support of public health infrastructure in four areas: epidemiological surveillance of outbreaks and infectious diseases and the emergence of antimicrobial resistance; training and basic research in molecular biology and virology; public and private development of vaccines and therapeutic drugs; and the strengthening and coordination between local, national and international public health institutions.”
He adds later in his paper:
“Determining exactly how and why the emerging diseases worldview had such widespread appeal is beyond the scope of this paper, but one of the most prominent strategies employed by its backers was explicitly to associate infectious diseases with American economic and security interests. Doing so allowed campaigners to make a case for federal funding not only through traditional health institutions, but also to take advantage of ‘trickle down’ funding through the Defense Department.”
As it happens, “in June 1996, President Clinton issued a Presidential
Decision Directive calling for a more focused US policy on infectious
diseases. The State Department’s Strategic Plan for International
Affairs lists protecting human health and reducing the spread of
infectious diseases as US strategic goals,and Secretary Albright in
December 1999 announced the second of two major U.S. initiatives to
combat HIV/AIDS. The unprecedented UN Security Council session devoted
exclusively to the threat to Africa from HIV/AIDS in January 2000 is a
measure of the international community’s concern about the infectious
disease threat.” (Global Infectious Disease Threat and Its Implications
for the United States. January 2000 National Intelligence Estimate).
Oddly enough, the 1996 Presidential Decision Directive was announced by
the Vice President, Al Gore. This is the same Al Gore who founded the
internet, led the fight to end global warming and sat silent on the
floor on the United States Senate as Black elected officials stood on
his behalf and on behalf of the disenfranchised voters in Florida who
delivered the popular vote to the Democratic nominee in 2000. It’s the
same Al Gore who has presented himself as a disinterested arbiter of a
pending dispute between Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton over the
nomination of the party in 2008.
The 1996 PDD
set six policy goals and established 8 new U.S. government roles and
responsibilities. Perhaps most importantly of all, it EXPANDED the
MANDATE of the United States Department of Defense. Looking back to
Nicolas King’s research, we find that a public health policy paper
written in 1992 advocated for epidemiological surveillance. Under Bill
Clinton, the Department of Defenses’ mission was simply expanded to
include surveillance – among other things. Consider this, the first new
government role and responsibility:
“The Federal government, in cooperation with State and local governments, international organizations, the private sector, and public health, medical and veterinary communities, will establish a national and international electronic network for surveillance and response regarding emerging infectious diseases.”
There isn’t a single word about international governments such as
those on the ground in Zambia, Uganda, Tanzania or South Africa. There
is, however, a great deal about likely coordination between, for
example, the Federal government, the State of Florida or the State of
Texas and the local government of the city of New York or the city of
Chicago, and private sector firms like GlaxoSmithKline and public health
communities like the NIH or even international organizations like the
Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. Each of these disparate entities is
to have a role in establishing a national and international electronic
network to surveil and respond to emerging infectious diseases.
3 comments:
Zionism!
I don't think the article stresses enough the role of NGOs. Going back to Carnegie, this is a very clever way for corporations to convert mere wealth into power and influence with zero or near transparency and accountability. Promoting the Anglo-American way under the auspices of philanthropy is the long con.
There's no American precedent for that in Africa:The government of the United States does not, has not, and will not have an authentic humanitarian interest in Africa.Our performance wrt the Rwandan and DRC genocides well underscores this characterization. A compelling cover story that rationalizes mobilization is precisely what the Doctor has ordered for Africa.
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