The Nation
February 24, 2003
George W. Bush's surprise State of the Union announcement of $10 billion in
new funding for the global AIDS crisis was masterful, lending an air of
humanitarian internationalism to his bellicose foreign policy. The White
House, however, offered scant information on its Emergency Plan for AIDS
Relief, and the all-important details will have to be worked out by Congress
in the weeks ahead. In the meantime, AIDS activists responded with a mixture
of guarded optimism and suspicion, and rightly so. Bush's announcement does
mark a significant shift, for the first time embracing treatment as a viable
and legitimate goal, as well as,apparently, the use of generic drugs. But
for Bush's words to translate into an effective AIDS plan, the
Administration will have to reverse course on a number of its policies.
Of primary concern is the Administration's record of duplicity on AIDS
funding. As Africa Action director Salih Booker points out, the White House
uses "Arthur Andersen-style accounting methods, counting old money several
times and using projections for sums that don't yet exist" when announcing
"new" aid packages. Indeed, according to the Wall Street Journal, Bush's
"budget for 2004 would reduce by about the same amount the funding that
aides had said would be sought for a separate development-aid initiative for
poor nations." Moreover, Bush's new funding is spread over five years and
begins in 2004 with only a modest increase over prior levels--less than what
was authorized by the Frist-Kerry bill, which passed the Senate last year
only to be scuttled by the White House.
This isn't the first AIDS smoke-and-mirrors ploy from this Administration.
In June Bush announced to great fanfare a $500 millioninitiative to reduce
mother-to-child HIV transmission in Africa. But just weeks earlier he had
personally intervened to reduce the mother-to-child funds in a bill
sponsored by, of all people, Jesse Helms. The treatment-access group Health
GAP reports that thisinitiative has yet to receive any funding and is tied
up in budget negotiations.
Equally troubling is Bush's decision to bypass the multilateral Global Fund,
instead earmarking 90 percent of new funding for bilateral aid agreements
with fourteen African and Caribbean countries. Bush's announcement couldn't
have come at a more critical time for the fund. Having just awarded $866
million in its second round of grants, the fund reports that it "lacks the
resources to approve a third round of proposals." According to the fund's
Anil Soni, it needs at least $6.3 billion over the next two years. AIDS
activists have called on the United States to contribute $2.5 billion of
that sum, but the Administration plan offers a mere $200 million a year.
Bush's unilateralism and parsimony are all the more puzzling, since within
days of his speech, Health and Human Services Secretary Tommy Thompson was
appointed the fund's chair, putting him in charge of fundraising. Thompson's
elevation is at odds with Bush's rebuff of the fund, but Asia Russell of
Health GAP says it creates some leverage for activists. "Thompson is making
a commitment as a public health official to devote energy and resources to
combat the greatest health crisis of our time, and we're going to hold him
to his words in terms of policy and funding."
At best, Bush's plan creates a parallel and redundant funding mechanism that
will compete with the Global AIDS Fund. At worst it will be modeled after
existing USAID programs, opening the door for right-wing and Big Pharma
lobbyists, who will pressure Bush to renege on his pledge to include
generics and condoms in treatment and prevention programs, both of which are
standard elements of Global Fund grants. As recently as this past December,
US delegates blocked a WTO plan to allow developing countries to import
generics for national medical emergencies, and USAID currently has a
buy-American-only policy that will have to be revised or evaded if Bush
truly intends to purchase generics with US dollars.
Also of note, this past summer Bush stripped the UN Population Fund (UNFPA)
of $34 million at the request of Republican House members who alleged that
UNFPA supported coerced abortions in China--which UNFPA denies--and then
shifted that funding to USAID. Many of the same lawmakers also wanted to
deny USAID funding to the Population Council for not using abstinence-based
HIV prevention programs. Right-wing abstinence groups, including those
federally funded by Bush's domestic abstinence-until-marriage program, have
taken a keen interest in prevention programs in Africa. They single out
abstinence education as the key reason for Uganda's significant reduction of
HIV incidence rates. However, Uganda's prevention program combines
abstinence and behavior change with condoms, and the most comprehensive data
suggest that all three were responsible for lower HIV rates and that
abstinence was a negligible factor for those already sexually active.
The fight against global AIDS now turns to Congress, where presidential
hopeful John Kerry and Senate majority leader Bill Frist are among the key
players. They, along with Congressional Democrats and sympathetic
Republicans, must be pressed to insure that Bush's rhetoric becomes
reality--and starts by appropriating real money to advance public health,
not a political agenda.
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