On Tuesday, Donald Trump announced that the US will sending funds the World Health Organisation (WHO) while a review is conducted to cover the WHO’s “role in severely mismanaging and covering up the spread of coronavirus”.
Speaking to Business Insider, former US officials who served under three different administrations slammed President Donald Trump for his response to the coronavirus outbreak which they claimed had enabled China to boost its global clout.
Referring to New York recently accepting 1,000 ventilators from Beijing after Trump rejected calls from Governor Andrew Cuomo for more machines, Schneider said that the US is “not only not providing leadership in terms of how people should be behaving at a time like this, but we are ourselves requiring and relying on aid from other countries; our states are receiving aid from China”.
Schneider claimed that one of America’s strengths has always been its capacity for self-criticism, “recognising our faults, and trying to correct them”, something that she said “is of course completely absent in the Trump administration”.
She was echoed by Jack Chow, who was a US ambassador for global HIV/AIDS during the George W. Bush administration and ex-World Health Organisation (WHO) assistant director-general.
Chow argued that “the lack of a global health defence network that could have been empowered by American medical expertise meant that the virus blossomed wherever underpreparation and slowfootedness prevailed”.
Also blaming Trump’s coronavirus-related stance was Jeremy Konyndyk, a senior fellow at the Centre for Global Development who oversaw the Obama administration’s response to the Ebola outbreak in West Africa as director for foreign disaster assistance at the United States Agency for International Development (USAID).
She accused the Trump administration of failing to understand that “global leadership is not about telling other countries what to do, it’s about being willing to be the first in line to do it”,
Trump Pulls the Plug on WHO
The remarks come after Trump announced on Tuesday that he was pulling funding for the World Health Organisation while his administration conducts an investigation of the UN agency, claiming that it had impeded the US response to the COVID-19 pandemic.
UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres was quick to respond to the move by stating that it is “[…] not the time to reduce the resources for the operations of the World Health Organisation or any other humanitarian organisation in the fight against the virus”.
The United States remains the nation worst hit by the COVID-19 pandemic, with over 609,000 confirmed coronavirus cases and over 26,000 fatalities, according to Johns Hopkins University.
Sourse: sputniknews.com