Kerry Says U.S. Bioterrorism Plan Has Gaps
NewsMax.com Wires
Wednesday, June 2, 2004
TAMPA, Fla. Democrat presidential candidate John Kerry
said Wednesday that in spite of deadly anthrax attacks and warnings
of further biological assaults on the United States, significant
gaps remained in the nation's preparations for bioterrorism.
"You need to prepare your public health facilities. You need to
prepare your hospitals and all the immediate first responders. Many
of them will tell you right now that despite the talk over the
course of the last years, there has not been that kind of
preparation," Kerry said in an interview with Associated Press
Radio.
"I think we need to do a better job of preparing our homeland
security," he said. "I'm not trying to scare people, obviously. I
think we're all trying to be reasonable in our approaches here. But
what I'm talking about is having a conversation with public health
officials and first responders so that we can respond effectively
if it were to happen."
Kerry called bioterrorism second only to the nuclear threat.
Asked by AP Radio how he would deal with North Korea and its
nuclear arsenal, Kerry said he would hold direct, bilateral talks
with North Korea just as President Bill Clinton did to create a process
for accountability even if it is flawed.
"You can't set up systems if you're not having real
discussions. This administration has failed to have those real
discussions," he said.
"And the truth is that the world is less safe today because the
television cameras are no longer in that reactor, the inspectors
are no longer there, the fuel rods are gone, and we now suspect
that they have five to six bombs that they didn't have before. So
you cannot say America is safer with a country that has developed
weapons while this administration has failed to negotiate and
failed to pressure," he said.
Kerry was meeting Wednesday with public health officials in
Florida, a key state in the 2004 election and one he has visited 17
times since he began seeking the presidency. In remarks prepared
for the meeting, the U.S. senator said the United States
lacked a national strategy in its efforts to reduce the threat of a
bioterrorist attack that could kill or endanger millions of
Americans.
Envelopes laced with anthrax were mailed in fall 2001 to news
media and government offices, including those of Sen. Tom Daschle,
D-S.D., and Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt. Five people died, among them
an editor at a tabloid newspaper's Florida headquarters, and 17
were sickened. Those cases remain unsolved.
Kerry said that though funding for biopreparedness had increased,
President Bush had proposed budget cuts in key areas. The Kerry
campaign cited reports that the administration proposed cutting the
state and local biopreparedness program by 11 percent, or $105
million, and trimming funding for biodefense countermeasures
overall by $49 million.
Hospitals are overburdened, Kerry said, and essential drugs and
vaccines have not been adequately developed. He said his plan to
make health insurance more affordable and accessible would reduce
lines in emergency rooms, relieve pressure on state budgets, and
sharpen the focus on bioterrorism and other health issues.
"Too many hospitals and emergency rooms are overwhelmed,
staggering beneath the everyday burdens of our broken health
system," he said in prepared remarks. "And our states and cities
and towns need leadership and guidance from Washington, not more of
the same policy that says, 'Figure this out on your own.'"
Steve Schmidt, spokesman for the Bush re-election campaign,
rejected Kerry's assertions as "baseless and misleading,"
contending that the president had made an unprecedented commitment
to research and development as a tool for combatting and blunting
the effects of biological attacks.
Schmidt said Bush's budget proposal for 2005 included $1.7
billion for biodefense research, far more than the $53 million
allocated to biodefense research in 2001, the year of the final
Clinton budget.
Kerry said as president he would appoint one person to oversee
all bioterrorism programs, budgets and strategic priorities and to
work with state and local leaders pursuing preparedness goals.
Investing in education and research in new technologies can reduce
casualties, control disease and save lives, he said.
The campaign said the International Association of EMTs and
Paramedics, with 7,000 members in 14 states, endorsed Kerry.
On Tuesday, as part of the tour promoting his policies on national security, Kerry promised to safeguard all nuclear weapons
and materials by the end of his first term if elected.
He also pledged to reduce weapons stockpiles, halt
production of the materials used to make them, end nuclear weapons
programs in nations such as North Korea and Iran, and halt the Bush
administration's program to develop a new generation of nuclear
weapons. He said such a U.S. program would undermine U.S. efforts
to persuade other countries to reduce their weapons stockpiles.
© 2004 Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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