As the federal response to the coronavirus outbreak continues to take shape, among the most important recent reports on the issue is this Foreign Policy piece from a month ago, which said the United States “has never been less prepared for a pandemic.”
Of particular interest was the article shining a light on Donald Trump’s May 2018 decision to order the shutdown of the White House National Security Council’s entire global health security unit. NBC News had a good report on this, also, noting that the president’s decision “to downsize the White House national security staff — and eliminate jobs addressing global pandemics — is likely to hamper the U.S. government’s response to the coronavirus.”
For his part, Trump doesn’t deny the fact that he disbanded his global health security team and proposed cuts to programs intended to prevent the spread of infectious disease. Instead, the president has argued that he can simply reassemble the operation as needed.
“I’m a business person,” he explained on Wednesday. “I don’t like having thousands of people around when you don’t need them. When we need them, we can get them back very quickly.”
That may sound sensible. It’s not. The Washington Post reports today:








