It has now been a year and a half since we  started living with – and too often dying from – COVID-19. Although the  pandemic is by no means over, it is not too soon to take a step back and draw  some preliminary conclusions from the experience. One conclusion that has  turned out to be especially tentative concerns the source of the pandemic. Initially,  the SARS-CoV-2 virus that causes COVID-19 was widely believed to have spread  from a wet market in Wuhan, China, after it jumped from an animal (probably a  bat) to humans through an intermediary host. But a growing number of scientists  and experts now believe it is at least as likely (if not more so) that the  virus emerged accidentally from the Wuhan Institute of Virology.
  There are many reasons to suspect an  accidental leak: the institute’s location and known work with coronaviruses;  the outbreak’s distance from bat populations; the inability to identify an  intermediary host or any early clusters of cases outside Hubei province; some  physical features of the virus; and China’s cover-up of evidence and refusal to  cooperate fully with international investigators. All are fueling speculation  and greater attention from US intelligence agencies, which have now been  ordered by President Joe Biden to increase their efforts to identify the  origins of COVID-19. If the “lab leak” narrative comes to be widely accepted,  it will severely damage China’s standing worldwide and could pose a serious  political problem for its leadership at home.
  Looking around the world and comparing  national performance in addressing the pandemic, what turns out to matter most  is not the nature of the political system so much as the quality of political  leadership. Russia, Brazil, Mexico, and the United States under President  Donald Trump all failed, while Taiwan, New Zealand, Vietnam, and the US under  President Joe Biden have all done relatively well. More than anything, this  record suggests that populist leaders perform the worst, possibly because they  tend to dismiss inconvenient facts and resist introducing necessary measures  that might cost them public support in the short term.
  Many countries in East Asia and Europe  seemed to have had the virus under control but are now experiencing  difficulties. Testing, social distancing, and contact tracing are necessary but  insufficient tools. Effective vaccines that can be produced and administered in  large numbers are essential.
  That fact is evident from the dramatic  turnaround in the US, for which the Biden administration deserves considerable  credit. The Trump administration, though, should be applauded for making  decisions that shortened the time normally needed to develop and produce  effective vaccines. The approval of several in little more than a year shows  that governments matter, and that cooperation between the public and private  sectors can be a formula for success.
  The pandemic has also shown that health  security is no less essential than physical security for economic growth. Where  the pandemic is being beaten back, as in the US and China, economic revival has  quickly followed.
  Technology has proven invaluable in at  least two ways. Aside from rapid development of a new generation of safe  vaccines, technology has helped us manage our personal lives and business  affairs much better than we could have done as recently as three decades ago,  before the arrival of high-speed internet and computing power that allows  remote work.
  The actual death toll of the pandemic is  likely to be two or even three times higher than official estimates of 3-4  million, given the number of deaths over the past year compared to the number  in previous years. Many “excess” deaths have not been attributed to the  pandemic, because governments either are unwilling to admit the truth (Russia  comes to mind) or are unable to provide an accurate accounting, especially when  deaths occur outside of hospitals (which may account for some of the gap in  India’s reporting).
  For all the talk about the “international  community,” the pandemic has exposed the absence of one. The failure to produce  and equitably distribute a sufficient number of vaccines worldwide is a  scandal. The demand is there; what remains is the will to match it with the  necessary supply. The Biden administration’s resistance to significant vaccine  exports is shortsighted and disappointing, especially as the US supply of  vaccines far exceeds domestic demand.
  There is no reason to think COVID-19 will  be the last pandemic. To the contrary, there almost certainly will be others,  be it another novel coronavirus or something else. As tragic as this pandemic  has proven to be, its costs will be compounded unless governments begin to  build the national and international institutions (including a much-reformed  World Health Organization) that will help us manage the next challenge of this  sort.
  One final point: It does not appear that  the pandemic will be a turning point in history. Many of the trends that were  visible two years ago – growing great power rivalry, a warming planet, aging  populations, failing states, democratic backsliding, cyber insecurity, nuclear  proliferation, and terrorism – remain acute. The pandemic will weaken and  distract us for a time, but the moment is fast arriving when other challenges  must again be given the priority they require.
Home » Opinion » Criticizing the Pandemic
Criticizing the Pandemic
| Richard Haass
            