Yes: US unrivaled in carrying out humanitarian missions
President Barack Obama was right to dispatch U.S. military units to help combat an Ebola outbreak in West Africa. But he did it for the wrong reasons. Obama called it a “national security” mission - a clear misuse of the term. Americans should be wary of Washington’s growing tendency to make every project a priority simply by appending “security” to the issue. National security efforts by design are statist, centralized, top-down activities. So when government says it wants to focus on climate security, energy security, food security, or any other pet project - what it is really saying is government plans to step in and take over. The challenge of keeping Ebola from becoming a global problem is not principally a security problem. Helping West Africa deal with Ebola is a humanitarian mission - not a national security deployment. It is, of course, wholly appropriate for the U.S. to provide humanitarian assistance when we have the means to do so and it does not conflict with America’s interest. America’s humanitarian response to the 2004 Tsunami in the Asia-Pacific dwarfed the assistance provide by most countries. Further, the U.S. military undertakes these kinds of missions quite frequently, both at home and abroad. Be it sandbagging during storms or delivering supplies and rescue services after disaster strikes, our military is skilled at alleviating non-military emergencies. It is not the principal job for our armed forces, but these are appropriate auxiliary missions. The right measure of these missions is whether or not they are suitable, feasible and acceptable. Without question, the West African crisis is a suitable use of U.S. forces. The Pentagon can quickly deploy expertise, support and infrastructure that will help local organizations stop the spread of the disease. And there’s self-interest here as well. The best way to keep more Ebola cases from checking in at the nearest Holiday Inn is to help quell the outbreak at its source. Alternative containment strategies - like banning travel and yanking visas - are much blunter instruments. The West African deployment also passes the “feasible” and “acceptable” tests. This is not to say the mission poses zero risks to our troops. Even medical professionals who presumably try to take all the right precautions have caught the disease. But, our troops are disciplined, and they should know the right risk-mitigation measures to take. They are also brave, courageous and willing volunteers. They understand there is danger going in harm’s way. That is part of the job. James Jay Carafano is vice president of Defense and Foreign Policy Studies for the Heritage Foundation, a conservative think-tank on Capitol Hill. Readers may write him at Heritage, 214 Massachusetts Ave. NE, Washington, DC 20002.Yes: US unrivaled in carrying out humanitarian missions
President Barack Obama was right to dispatch U.S. military units to help combat an Ebola outbreak in West Africa. But he did it for the wrong reasons.Obama called it a “national security” mission - a clear misuse of the term. Americans should be wary of Washington’s growing tendency to make every project a priority simply by appending “security” to the issue.National security efforts by design are statist, centralized, top-down activities. So when government says it wants to focus on climate security, energy security, food security, or any other pet project - what it is really saying is government plans to step in and take over.The challenge of keeping Ebola from becoming a global problem is not principally a security problem. Helping West Africa deal with Ebola is a humanitarian mission - not a national security deployment.It is, of course, wholly appropriate for the U.S. to provide humanitarian assistance when we have the means to do so and it does not conflict with America’s interest.America’s humanitarian response to the 2004 Tsunami in the Asia-Pacific dwarfed the assistance provide by most countries.Further, the U.S. military undertakes these kinds of missions quite frequently, both at home and abroad. Be it sandbagging during storms or delivering supplies and rescue services after disaster strikes, our military is skilled at alleviating non-military emergencies. It is not the principal job for our armed forces, but these are appropriate auxiliary missions.The right measure of these missions is whether or not they are suitable, feasible and acceptable.Without question, the West African crisis is a suitable use of U.S. forces. The Pentagon can quickly deploy expertise, support and infrastructure that will help local organizations stop the spread of the disease.And there’s self-interest here as well. The best way to keep more Ebola cases from checking in at the nearest Holiday Inn is to help quell the outbreak at its source. Alternative containment strategies - like banning travel and yanking visas - are much blunter instruments.The West African deployment also passes the “feasible” and “acceptable” tests. This is not to say the mission poses zero risks to our troops.Even medical professionals who presumably try to take all the right precautions have caught the disease. But, our troops are disciplined, and they should know the right risk-mitigation measures to take.They are also brave, courageous and willing volunteers. They understand there is danger going in harm’s way. That is part of the job.James Jay Carafano is vice president of Defense and Foreign Policy Studies for the Heritage Foundation, a conservative think-tank on Capitol Hill. Readers may write him at Heritage, 214 Massachusetts Ave. NE, Washington, DC 20002.
Pro/Con: Was US right to deploy troops to battle Ebola?
Yes: US unrivaled in carrying out humanitarian missions [[{"type":"media","view_mode":"media_large","fid":"1270967","attributes":{"alt":"","class":"media-image","height":"120","typeof":"foaf:Image","width":"108"}}]]President Barack Obama was righ...
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