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Bush uses AIDS funding as an instrument of foreign policy
By Barry Mason
18 February 2003
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US President George W. Bush announced $15 billion to fight
HIV and AIDS in his State of the Union address on January 28.
The proposed funds are to be spent in the African countries of
Botswana, Ivory Coast, Ethiopia, Kenya, Mozambique, Namibia, Nigeria,
Rwanda, South Africa, Tanzania, Uganda, and Zambia. Also included
are the two Caribbean countries Guyana and Haiti.
Two thirds of the sum is new money, with the remainder being
drawn from existing proposals. However, the move is far less generous
than it first appears and has a definite and sinister ulterior
motive.
In a deliberate snub, the United Nations Global Fund to Fight
AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria will only receive $1 billion of
the proposed aid over the next five years. The initial installment
of $200 million will be given for the financial year 2004, which
starts in October. This is less than this years pledge to
the Global Fund of $380 million.
As a result, the Global Fund is in danger of going broke. Top
fund official Anil Soni said; We have a problem. We need
to get new dollars in, so we can continue to fund programmes.
Approximately $6.3 billion is needed over the next two years to
continue funding proposals. UN Secretary General Kofi Annan has
stated the world would need to spend between $7 billion and $10
billion a year to effectively treat HIV/AIDS and other infectious
diseases in underdeveloped countries.
Although it does not intend to finance the Global Fund, the
Bush administration is determined to keep control of it. Tommy
G. Thompson, the head of the US Health and Human Services Department,
is the Funds chairman.
Rather than contribute to the Global Fund, Bush intends to
allocate the new aid unilaterally through US government agencies,
such as USAID and the Centers for Disease Control (CDC).
USAID is the major government body for distributing aid. Its
role is to foster the strategic and economic interests of the
US government. In the year 2004 around a quarter of its $8 billion
budget will go to Israel, Egypt, Turkey and Pakistan. The CDC
is the government body associated with public health controls
but has connections, via its Chemical and Biological warfare role,
with the National Security apparatus.
Prior to his announcement the Boston based Physicians for Human
Rights (PHR) sent a letter to Bush signed by over a 100 leading
health professionals, including Nobel prize winners, involved
in the care and treatment of HIV patients. They urged Bush to
respond to the HIV/AIDS pandemic and called on the US government
to support the Global Fund and to provide debt relief for poor
countries.
Following Bushs speech PHR Director, Holly Burkhalter,
said; The funding of the new plan under the Presidents
budget would come too slowly. He has allocated only $2 billion
in fiscal year 2004, still well short of the $3.5 billion that
Physicians for Human Rights is calling for on an annual basis.
The money for his plan should be front-loaded to pay for the most
expensive initial investment: building health infrastructure.
With infrastructure in place, the treatment costs will go down.
They condemned the fact that the vast bulk of the new
money will be for US government programs. They were particularly
concerned at the creation of a new, high-level Special Coordinator
for International HIV/AIDS Assistance at the State Department.
They pointed out that neither the Department of Health and Human
Services, which houses the CDC and the National Institute of Health,
nor USAID has any experience in this area. USAID Administrator
Andrew Natsios opposes treatment of AIDS with anti-retrovirals
in poor countries.
The US based Global AIDS Alliance criticized the slow timetable
of the funding which they considered, inappropriate from
a public health standpoint, because the epidemic is expanding
exponentially now and there is extensive under funding of currently
available programmes that are ready for scale-up.
They also criticized the failure to provide funding to some
of the countries most heavily affected by HIV/AIDS such as the
Democratic Republic of Congo and Mali. They pointed out the obscenity
of African countries having to pay debts to the west during the
HIV pandemic. In 2001, African governments paid $14.6 billion
in debt servicing to the IMF, the World Bank and wealthy nation
creditors. This extraction of local resources directly undermines
all efforts to combat AIDS, their statement read.
The American based AIDS and human rights group Health GAP (Global
Access Project) criticized Bushs attack on the UN Global
Fund and went on, USAID and CDC do not have the capacity
nor the desire to implement the programmes called for by the president.
Health GAP state bluntly that, The funding levels are
fraudulent. By accumulating numbers over arbitrary lengths of
time and back loading until the distant future, the Administration
makes a little look like a lot.
Bush clearly intends to use the issue of AIDS funding to impose
US policies, granting aid to those who toe the line and denying
it to those regimes who fall short of the mark or find themselves
out of favor.
He was originally going to announce the funding on his African
trip at the beginning of this year and has had a team working
on the plan for several months. Those involved are a strange group
to be concerned in health matters. They include Dr Anthony Fauci
a leading expert on bio-terrorism and vaccine research who talks
to Bush on a regular basis, Joshua Bolton, head of national security
and international affairs at the Office of Management and Budget,
and Robin Cleveland, deputy national security adviser.
The choice of personnel is in line with two reports published
last year, which discussed the HIV/AIDS pandemic as a security
threat to the USA. The National Intelligence Council (NIC) which
answers directly to Central Intelligence director, George Tenet,
published one report, The Next Wave of HIV/AIDS. The other
was produced by the Washington based Center for Strategic and
International Studies (CSIS). Entitled The Destabilizing Impact
of HIV/AIDS, the reports preamble explains that it was
produced to highlight for military and security policy leaders
the security challenges posed by rapidly spreading HIV/Aids and
to propose concrete measures to strengthen the US response to
these emerging challenges.
Bushs announcement is in line with this assessment. It
demonstrates his administrations determination to treat
the HIV/AIDS epidemic as a matter of security not a health question
or a humanitarian issue. The money will be used as an instrument
of foreign policy to reward or punish underdeveloped countries
and to tighten US control over them.
See Also:
UN fund says money
running out to fight AIDS
[11 November 2002]
AIDS could kill 55
million in Africa over next two decades
[15 July 2002]
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