Pandemic Reveals Misplaced Priorities
April 2020
By Daryl G. Kimball
For decades, national security and health
experts have warned of the risks of global threats that are simply too big for
one country to handle, such as disease pandemics, climate change, and nuclear
war. For many years, the response of our national and global leaders has fallen
short.
Twenty years ago, John Steinbruner, then the
chair of the Arms Control Association Board of Directors, warned in his
book Principles of Global Security that globalization is
generating “a new class of security problems in which dispersed processes pose
dangers of large magnitude and incalculable probability.” He argued that
policymakers “will have to shift from contingency reaction to anticipatory
prevention” and “this will have to be done in global coalition.”
Unfortunately, U.S. spending priorities and
modes of thinking about security have been become increasingly defined in
military terms. Congress provided a record $746 billion for national defense in
fiscal year 2020. U.S. arms manufacturers dominate the global arms trade and
help fuel regional conflicts that undermine human development. In recent years,
the Trump administration’s nationalist “America First” foreign policy has made
it even more difficult for the world’s leading nations to work together on the
toughest global challenges.
Today, the novel coronavirus (COVID-19)
pandemic, which threatens the lives and livelihoods of millions worldwide, has
laid bare the terrible human cost of these misplaced policy choices.
As the scope and scale of the coronavirus
threat began to reveal itself in January and February, the Trump administration
focused on other matters. For example, the administration in February asked
Congress for $44.5 billion in fiscal year 2021 for programs to maintain and
upgrade the U.S. nuclear arsenal, a 19 percent increase above the previous
year.
The U.S. government spends tens of billions of
taxpayer dollars to maintain a massive nuclear arsenal capable of destroying
the planet many times over. Meanwhile, it does not have a stockpile of masks
large enough to protect front-line health care workers who are battling
COVID-19 and is proposing to cut programs that help provide for early disease
detection.
The U.S. stockpile of medical supplies
includes 12 million medical-grade N95 masks
and 30 million surgical masks, which is only about 1 percent of the 3.5 billion
needed in a year to deal with a disease pandemic. At the price of $0.50 a mask, it would cost
approximately $1.75 billion to build up the N95 stockpile and about $350
million a year to replace expired masks, according to a report published by The War Zone. That is less than the $3.2 billion increase above
fiscal year 2020 levels that the Pentagon is seeking for its multiyear programs
to sustain and rebuild the U.S. triad of nuclear-armed missiles, submarines,
and bombers.
Meanwhile, the administration is proposing to
slash by 37 percent the budget request for the Defense Department’s Biological
Threat Reduction Program, which “seeks to facilitate detection and reporting of
diseases caused by especially dangerous pathogens.” As a result of that
program’s previously provided threat reduction training efforts, local
officials in Thailand detected the first case of the novel coronavirus there,
only days after its initial discovery in Wuhan, China.
Now is the time for Congress to radically
scale back the existing plan to replace and upgrade the already excessive U.S.
nuclear arsenal, particularly plans for new missiles and bombers, new nuclear
warheads, and production infrastructure. This would save billions of taxpayer
dollars that should be spent on addressing higher priority human and health
security needs.
Making matters worse, the United States has
become part of the problem rather than helping to find viable solutions to
counter the most serious global threats.
While the Trump administration is seeking to
expand U.S. nuclear capabilities at the expense of programs that address human
security needs, it is turning its back on hard-won agreements that have
effectively reduced the nuclear threat.
President Donald Trump’s unilateral withdrawal
from the 2015 Iran nuclear deal with no viable plan to replace it creates the
potential for a new nuclear crisis. Iran’s leaders have retaliated to the
reimposition of U.S. sanctions by breaching key limits on their nuclear activities.
In addition, the post-Cold War progress toward
reducing the role and number of nuclear weapons has stalled. To date, Trump has
failed to take up Russia’s offer to extend the only remaining treaty that
limits the world’s two largest nuclear arsenals, the 2010 New Strategic Arms
Reduction Treaty. The global nonproliferation and disarmament regime, the best
prophylactic against a nuclear pandemic, is under serious threat.
The unfolding COVID-19 outbreak will not only
take away the lives of people, but it will change our personal lives, and it
will very likely force changes in the international system. If we are to
survive well into this century, there must be a profound shift in the way we
deal with global security challenges and how we align our scientific, economic,
diplomatic, and political resources to address the health, climate, and nuclear
dangers that threaten us all.
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