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AIDS Is Declared Threat to Security
 _____On the Web_____

• CIA Unclassified version of the AIDS Report
• State Dept. 1999 U.S. International Response To HIV/AIDS

By Barton Gellman
Washington Post Staff Writer
Sunday, April 30, 2000; Page A01


Convinced that the global spread of AIDS is reaching catastrophic dimensions,
the Clinton administration has formally designated the disease for the first
time as a threat to U.S. national security that could topple foreign
governments, touch off ethnic wars and undo decades of work in building
free-market democracies abroad.

The National Security Council, which has never before been involved in
combating an infectious disease, is directing a rapid reassessment of the
government's efforts. The new push is reflected in the doubling of budget
requests--to $254 million--to combat AIDS overseas and in the creation on
Feb. 8 of a White House interagency working group. The group has been
instructed to "develop a series of expanded initiatives to drive the
international efforts" to combat the disease.

Top officials and some members of Congress contemplate much higher spending
levels. The urgency of addressing AIDS has also touched off internal disputes
over long-settled positions on trade policy and on legal requirements that
aid contractors buy only American supplies.

The new effort--described by its architects as tardy and not commensurate
with the size of the crisis--was spurred last year by U.S. intelligence
reports that looked at the pandemic's broadest consequences for foreign
governments and societies, particularly in Africa. A National Intelligence
Estimate prepared in January, representing consensus among government
analysts, projected that a quarter of southern Africa's population is likely
to die of AIDS and that the number of people dying of the disease will rise
for a decade before there is much prospect of improvement. Based on current
trends, that disastrous course could be repeated, perhaps exceeded, in south
Asia and the former Soviet Union.

"At least some of the hardest-hit countries, initially in sub-Saharan Africa
and later in other regions, will face a demographic catastrophe" over the
next 20 years, the study said. "This will further impoverish the poor and
often the middle class and produce a huge and impoverished orphan cohort
unable to cope and vulnerable to exploitation and radicalization."

Dramatic declines in life expectancy, the study said, are the strongest risk
factor for "revolutionary wars, ethnic wars, genocides and disruptive regime
transitions" in the developing world. Based on historical analysis of 75
factors that tend to destabilize governments, the authors said the social
consequences of AIDS appear to have "a particularly strong correlation with
the likelihood of state failure in partial democracies."

Another mobilizing factor is American politics. African American leaders,
such as former representative Ron Dellums (D-Calif.) and Rep. Jesse L.
Jackson Jr. (D-Ill)., have adopted the cause of AIDS in Africa. Their
interest is converging with that of long-standing AIDS activists in the
United States and Europe, where the course of the epidemic has been slowed by
preventive efforts and life-saving combinations of anti-retroviral drugs.
They are angry at policies that price those medicines beyond the reach of the
developing world.

In June, those activists disrupted Vice President Gore's presidential
campaign announcement in Carthage, Tenn., and two other speeches that
week--"blindsiding us completely," as one senior adviser put it. The
activists, and several senior Clinton administration officials, say that
pressure accelerated the White House's response.

There is no recent precedent for treating disease as a security threat. So
unfamiliar are public health agencies with the apparatus of national defense
that one early task force meeting was delayed when Co-chairwoman Sandra
Thurman, whose Office of National AIDS Policy is across the street from the
White House, could not find the Situation Room.

For all the stakes they now describe, Clinton administration officials do not
contemplate addressing them on a scale associated with traditional security
priorities. Gore's national security adviser, Leon Fuerth, freely
acknowledged that the 2001 budget request of $254 million to combat AIDS
abroad--a sum surpassed, for example, by drone aircraft in the Pentagon
budget--provides "resources that are inadequate for the task." He called the
work of the task force "an iterative process" aimed at slowing the plague's
rate of increase and alleviating some of its effects. Before this year,
federal spending on AIDS overseas remained relatively flat.

Other officials noted that the United States has endorsed U.N. Secretary
General Kofi Annan's declared five-year goal of reducing the rate of new
infections by 25 percent. That falls close to the CIA's best-case, and least
probable, scenario. Because such a turn of events would demand resources from
U.S. allies and multinational bodies, the new White House group has been
instructed to "develop a series of expanded initiatives to drive the
international efforts."

Fuerth, a member of the "principals committee" that takes up the most
important foreign policy questions, told representatives from 16 agencies on
Feb. 8 that the panel wanted a package of proposals for Clinton within a
several weeks. The working group is scheduled to finish drafting its
proposals in May. Fuerth said the government is looking for "the kind of
focus and coordination on this issue that we normally strive for on national
security issues."

"The numbers of people who are dying, the impact on elites--like the army,
the educated people, the teachers--is quite severe," he said. "In the end it
was a kind of slow-motion destruction of everything we were trying, in our
contact programs and our military-to-military programs, to build up, and
would affect the viability of these societies, would affect the stability of
the region. . . . In the world that we're facing, the destiny of the
continent of Africa matters. And it isn't as if this disease is going to stay
put in sub-Saharan Africa."

Twenty-three million people are infected in sub-Saharan Africa, with new
infections coming at the rate of roughly 5,000 a day, according to World
Health Organization figures. Of 13 million deaths to date, 11 million have
been in sub-Saharan Africa. In the developing world, the disease spreads
primarily through heterosexual contact.

The intelligence estimate portrays the pandemic as the bad side of
globalization. Accelerating trade and travel--along with underlying
conditions favorable to the disease--are pushing much of Asia, and
particularly India, toward "a dramatic increase in infectious disease deaths,
largely driven by the spread of HIV/AIDS," the intelligence report said. "By
2010, the region could surpass Africa in the number of HIV infections." The
number of infections now is relatively low, but the growth rate is high and
governments have been slow to respond.

Infections are also growing rapidly, and largely unchecked, in the former
Soviet Union and Eastern Europe. The intelligence estimate said this growth
will "challenge democratic development and transitions and possibly
contribute to humanitarian emergencies and military conflicts to which the
United States may need to respond." The report also anticipates that
"infectious disease-related trade embargoes and restrictions on travel and
immigration also will cause frictions among and with key trading partners and
other selected states."

"The thing that's most staggering, and people are just beginning to grasp, is
that Africa is the tip of the iceberg," Thurman said. "We are just at the
beginning of a pandemic the likes of which we have not seen in this century,
and in the end will probably never have seen in history."

Senior administration officials, some of them apparently frustrated, said
that the government does not dispute estimates by the Joint United Nations
Program on HIV/AIDS that it would take nearly $2 billion to fund adequate
prevention in Africa, and a like sum for treatment. What the United States
has been spending, by contrast, "is a rounding error for county budgets" in
Fairfax and Montgomery counties, said one disgusted official.

"I don't have a fantasy that we're going to go to the Hill and get $5 billion
to build Africa's health care infrastructure," said one senior Africa
policymaker. "We're trying to determine effective steps that need to be
taken, and can be taken, right now."

After initial resistance from U.S. Trade Representative Charlene Barshefsky,
the government has agreed in principle to encourage cheaper access to
life-saving drugs by relaxing hard-line positions that protect U.S.
drugmakers' intellectual property. Gore has said publicly that the United
States does not rule out the use by afflicted countries of locally made or
imported generics of drugs under patent by American companies. Assistant
Trade Representative Joseph Papovich has written to the governments of
Thailand and South Africa with new formulas for resolving intellectual
property disputes on such medicines.

But several participants in the government effort said the practical meaning
of the change, if any, will have to be decided at the Cabinet level or by
Clinton personally. An early test comes in May, when Barshefsky's office
decides whether South Africa should be removed from the "watch list" of
countries facing potential trade sanctions. South Africa is on that list
because it passed a law the United States initially described as threatening
to the intellectual property of American drug manufacturers.

With the prospect of substantial new spending, agencies ranging from the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and National Institutes of
Health to the Labor Department are fighting over the allocation of funds.
Undersecretary of State Frank Loy, meanwhile, is said by participants to be
resisting the emerging consensus that the international AIDS effort should be
centered in Thurman's office.

The task force has also battled over proposals to amend the Foreign
Assistance Act, which requires all taxpayer-funded aid to come from American
suppliers. Public health agencies want exceptions for condoms and AIDS test
kits, which can be acquired more cheaply overseas. Congress willing, the task
force is likely to recommend that change.

The high-profile attention from the top is "raising this issue in ways that
leaders [of afflicted nations] can't ignore it," one White House official
said. Richard C. Holbrooke, the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, used
his rotation as Security Council president in January to declare a month on
Africa. He made AIDS the subject of the first Security Council meeting of
2000 and invited Gore to speak. When Clinton traveled to India in March, he
successfully pressed the government to issue a joint declaration on AIDS.

Pervading the recent U.S. effort is a strong sense among participants of time
misspent. The virulence of the pandemic was accurately foreseen, and "the
United States didn't exactly cover itself with glory," said one close adviser
to Clinton.

"We saw it coming, and we didn't act as quickly as we could have," said
Helene D. Gayle, a physician who directs AIDS prevention at the CDC. "I'm not
sure what that says about how seriously we took it, how seriously we took
lives in Africa."

Peter Piot, a virologist who heads the United Nations AIDS efforts in Geneva,
said "the good news is that the U.S. government is mobilizing. The bad news
is that it took so long. This is not a catastrophe that came out of the blue.
It has been clearly coming for at least 10 years."

Asked about those comments, Thurman looked pained.

"Oh yeah," she said softly. "It's very late. But better late than never. You
rarely ever get a second chance in an epidemic."

Staff researcher Robert Thomason contributed to this report.

THE IMPACT OF AIDS

More than 16 million people have died from AIDS since the 1980s, 60 percent
of them in sub-Saharan Africa. Not since the bubonic plague ravaged Europe in
the Middle Ages has there been as devastating a disease. U.S. officials have
reached the conclusion that the impact of AIDS will be so vast that it has
become a threat to U.S. national security.

Percentage of adult population infected with HIV or suffering from AIDS.
Selected countries

Zimbabwe: 25.9%

Botswana: 25.1

Namibia: 19.4

Zambia: 19.1

Swaziland: 18.5

Malawi: 14.9

Mozambique: 14.2

South Africa: 12.9

Rwanda: 12.8

Kenya: 11.6

Central African Rep.: 10.8

Ivory Coast: 10.1

India: .82

U.S.: .76

AIDS already has significantly shortened life expectancy and will cut more
years off people's lives by 2010.

Namibia

Life expectancy without AIDS (years): 70.1

Life expectancy with AIDS (years): 38.9

Change: 44.5% drop

Zimbabwe

Life expectancy without AIDS (years): 69.5

Life expectancy with AIDS (years): 38.8

Change: 44.2

Botswana

Life expectancy without AIDS (years): 66.3

Life expectancy with AIDS (years): 37.8

Change: 42.9

Swaziland

Life expectancy without AIDS (years): 63.2

Life expectancy with AIDS (years): 37.1

Change: 41.3

Malawi

Life expectancy without AIDS (years): 56.8

Life expectancy with AIDS (years): 34.8

Change: 38.7

Zambia

Life expectancy without AIDS (years): 60.1

Life expectancy with AIDS (years): 37.8

Change: 37.1

Lesotho

Life expectancy without AIDS (years): 65.9

Life expectancy with AIDS (years): 44.7

Change: 32.1

South Africa

Life expectancy without AIDS (years): 68.2

Life expectancy with AIDS (years): 48.0

Change: 29.6

Tanzania

Life expectancy without AIDS (years): 60.7

Life expectancy with AIDS (years): 46.1

Change: 24.0

AIDS has left about 9 million children without their mothers or both parents,
the vast majority in sub-Saharan Africa.

Number of 15-year-olds per 10,000 of that age group who have lost their
mothers or both parents to AIDS.

Uganda: 1,100

Zambia: 890

Zimbabwe: 700

Malawi: 580

Togo: 400

Botswana: 390

Burundi: 390

Ivory Coast: 380

Thailand: 30

U.S.: 10

U.S. assistance to combat AIDS has stayed around $120 million for the past
seven years. But officials believe much more is needed to halt the disease
and treat those infected.

2001 budget request: $264 million

SOURCE: World Bank, WHO, UNICEF, USAID


© 2000 The Washington Post Company

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