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CORONAVIRUS: OH, LORDY! AIN’T NOTHIN’ LIKE A TIMELINE!


If the US is at war with the SARS-CoV-2 virus and a wartime President ignores the inconvenient truth of the number of infections; if he fails to respond to the pandemic for 70 days after receiving his first formal notification of the outbreak in China, standing idly by as it rages beyond the medical community’s ability contain it; then does that make the President a war criminal?  To think about this question, I made my own timeline, my go-to forensic tool to understand complex events.  
    
To compile my timeline, which starts on January 13, 2017, the date the Trump Administration was briefed on America's pandemic readiness by the Obama Administration, and ends on March 18, 2020, the date Trump invoked, but did not use, the Defense Production Act, I relied heavily on a number of sources.  Among them are a timeline at Just Security Timeline prepared by Just Security, an online forum based at the Reiss Center on Law and Security at NYU School of Law that analyzes US national security law and policy; comprehensive investigative reporting by the Washington Post at WaPo Denial and Dysfunction, as updated here WaPo Update, and analyzed here WaPo Timeline; two reports last weekend from the New York Times at NYT Trump Response and NYT Red Dawn Emails; an article on Peter Navarro at NYT Navarro, also reported by Axios here Axios Navarro; and finally, this disputed but intriguing article on the Department of Defense’s coronavirus response from ABC News online at ABC Intelligence.  

The reporting is consistent.  The evidence is damning.  Here is the sequence of events.  The dates of Trump’s actions to protect Americans are in GREEN. His aspirational words are in RED. You be the judge.
JANUARY 13, 2017
Outgoing Obama team runs Trump transition team through a series of pandemic-scenarios to familiarize the incoming team with “domestic incident management policy and practices” in the face of major crises. Key takeaways: (1) a collective understanding of the science and the disease must drive response decisions; (2) days and even hours are paramount in order to build as much lead time as possible; (3) a coordinated and unified national response and message is necessary; and (4) “medical countermeasure strategy is key for success,” including social distancing and addressing shortages in ventilators and personal protective equipment. 

Trump administration attendees include: Steven Mnuchin, Rep. Mike Pompeo, Wilbur Ross, Betsy DeVos, Dr. Ben Carson, Elaine Chao, Stephen Miller, Marc Short, Reince Priebus (resigned), Rex Tillerson (fired), Gen. James Mattis (fired), Rep. Ryan Zinke (resigned), Sen. Jeff Sessions (resigned), Sen. Dan Coats (fired), Andrew Puzder (not confirmed), Dr. Tom Price (resigned), Gov. Rick Perry (resigned), Dr. David Shulkin (fired), Gen. John Kelly (resigned), Rep. Mick Mulvaney, Linda McMahon (resigned), Sean Spicer (fired), Joe Hagin (resigned), Joshua Pitcock (resigned), Tom Bossert (fired), KT McFarland (resigned), Gen. Michael Flynn (awaiting criminal sentencing), Gary Cohn (resigned), Katie Walsh (resigned), and Rick Dearborn (resigned). (Emphasis added in bold; Just Security Timeline.)

MAY 11, 2017
Director of National Intelligence (DNI) Dan Coats tells Congress, “A novel or reemerging microbe that is easily transmissible between humans and is highly pathogenic remains a major threat because such an organism has the potential to spread rapidly and kill millions.”

SEPTEMBER, 2017
Trump Administration contracts with Applied Research Associates to create a prototype for a reusable N95 respirator mask.

DECEMBER, 2017
Trump Administration bans the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) from using the words “evidence-based” and “science-based.”

FEBRUARY 9, 2018
Trump signs a bill that cuts $1.35 billion in funding for the CDC’s Prevention and Public Health Fund, established in 2016 as part of the Affordable Care Act.

FEBRUARY 13, 2018
In written testimony to Congress, DNI Coats writes:

The increase in frequency and diversity of reported disease outbreaks—such as dengue and Zika—probably will continue through 2018, including the potential for a severe global health emergency that could lead to major economic and societal disruptions, strain governmental and international resources, and increase calls on the United States for support. A novel strain of a virulent microbe that is easily transmissible between humans continues to be a major threat, with pathogens such as H5N1 and H7N9 influenza and Middle East Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus having pandemic potential if they were to acquire efficient human-to-human transmissibility.

APRIL 10, 2018
The day after John Bolton replaces fired H.R.McMaster as Trump’s National Security Advisor, he fires Tom Bossert, White House Homeland Security Advisor, who had called for a comprehensive biodefense strategy against pandemics and biological attacks.

MAY 7, 2018
The White House sends budget plan to Congress proposing to cut $252 million for health security preparedness in funds remaining from the 2014-2015 Ebola epidemic.

The National Security Council’s (NSC) director of medical and biodefense preparedness warns that pandemic flu is the top health security concern and that the country is not prepared for it.

MAY 8, 2018
Bolton removes Rear Adm. Timothy Ziemer from the NSC and disbands Ziemer’s unit, the Directorate for Global Health Security and Biodefense established by the Obama Administration after the Ebola pandemic. Ziemer was the sole senior official focused on pandemic preparedness. He is not replaced.

SEPTEMBER, 2018
Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Alex Azar diverts $266 million from CDC to pay for housing detained immigrant children.

HHS receives detailed plans from medical manufacturer to create a new machine with the capacity to make protective masks at high speed (1.5 million masks per day). The machine was specifically designed to handle pandemic-related medical shortages and was the culmination of an Obama-era preparedness plan. Trump Administration pays millions of dollars to the company but does not follow through with making the machine.

SEPTEMBER 18, 2018
Trump issues a Presidential Memorandum and National Biodefense Strategy designed to ensure a comprehensive and coordinated approach to biological incidents. The National Biodefense Strategy outlines a high-level roadmap of the US response to biological threats and incidents, identifying the need to “establish manufacturing surge capacity” for diagnostic tests and personal protective equipment in anticipation of a pandemic.  The roadmap is not implemented.

JANUARY 29, 2019
DNI warns that a major disease outbreak is one of the top global threats, writing: “We assess that the United States and the world will remain vulnerable to the next flu pandemic or large-scale outbreak of a contagious disease that could lead to massive rates of death and disability, severely affect the world economy, strain international resources, and increase calls on the United States for support.”

APRIL, 2019
HHS Secretary says what keeps everyone in the biodefense world up at night is the threat of a pandemic flu. 

JULY, 2019
Trump Administration eliminates an American public health position designed to detect disease outbreaks in China

SEPTEMBER, 2019
The President’s Council of Economic Advisors (CEA) warns that an influenza pandemic may cause tremendous health and economic losses:

The United States is unprepared to deliver a sufficient number of vaccine doses quickly enough to stop the rapid initial spread of a pandemic virus. Pandemic influenza is a low-probability but high-cost problem that should not be ignored. The current influenza vaccine manufacturing infrastructure in the U.S. is dependent on egg-based production that is too slow to produce adequate doses of vaccines for unexpected pandemic outbreaks and may impair vaccine efficacy. This could lead to tremendous, avoidable costs.

OCTOBER, 2019
Trump Administration concludes a months-long simulation (above), code-named “Crimson Contagion,” designed to respond to a global influenza pandemic. HHS determines the US is underprepared, underfunded, and under-coordinated to fight an influenza-like pandemic. The deficiencies are not addressed.

Trump Administration cuts funding for a government research program designed to recognize animal viruses that could infect humans and prevent pandemics. 

NOVEMBER 17, 2019
As reported in the South China Morning Post at SCMP:  

The first case of someone in China suffering from the disease caused by the novel coronavirus can be traced back to November 17, according to government data seen by the South China Morning Post. Chinese authorities have so far [March 13, 2020] identified at least 266 people who were infected last year, all of whom came under medical surveillance at some point. Some of the cases were likely backdated after health authorities had tested specimens taken from suspected patients.

LATE NOVEMBER, 2019 - DISPUTED
According to ABC Intelligence, citing four unnamed sources familiar with a classified intelligence report, the White House NSC, the Pentagon’s Joint Staff, and the Defense Intelligence Agency were briefed on the coronavirus in an intelligence report from the military’s National Center for Medical Intelligence(NCMI)  around Thanksgiving, 2019.  The NCMI report was compiled through wire and computer interception and satellite imagery and reportedly concluded that an outbreak of the virus “could be a cataclysmic event” for US forces in Asia.  After multiple briefings and vetting throughout December, an explanation of the warnings appeared in the President's daily intelligence reports (PDB) in early January. For something to have appeared in the PDBs, it would have had to go through weeks of vetting and analysis, according to people who have worked on presidential briefings in both Republican and Democratic administrations.

Per ABC Intelligence, “If it were true that America’s spy agencies were caught that off guard, one intelligence officer told ABC News, ‘that would be a massive intel failure on the order of 9/11.  But it wasn’t.  They had the intelligence.’” 

Jon Cohen, former acting undersecretary of DHS, said, "It’s not surprising to me that the intelligence community detected the outbreak; what is surprising and disappointing is that the White House ignored the clear warning signs, failed to follow established pandemic response protocols and were slow to put in place a government-wide effort to respond to this crisis."

On April 5, 2020, George Stephanopoulos asked Defense Secretary Mark Esper if there were reports in November from the NCMI. “I can’t recall,” Esper said. When asked if he would be in a position to know if there was such a briefing in December, Esper replied, “Yes. I’m not aware of that.”

DECEMBER 10, 2019
One of the first known coronavirus patients begins to feel ill in Wuhan.  (NOTE:  according to Johns Hopkins, symptoms occur within a two- to 14-day incubation period; therefore, this person could have been infected in late November, giving some credence to the disputed NCMI report.  Also, see the November 17, 2019 entry above.)

DECEMBER 16, 2019
Patient suffering from respiratory illness is admitted to Wuhan hospital.

DECEMBER 27, 2019
Wuhan health officials are told a novel coronavirus caused the illness.

DECEMBER 30, 2019
A whistleblower, Chinese doctor Li Wenliang, alerts more than 100 of his colleagues about a new disease in Wuhan in a widely circulated post on social media.

DECEMBER 31, 2019
China tells the World Health Organization’s (WHO) China office about cases of an unknown illness.

The CDC hears about a cluster of mysterious respiratory cases in China and begins developing reports for HHS on January 1.

JANUARY 2, 2020
Chinese researchers map the new coronavirus' complete genetic information.

JANUARY 3, 2020
CDC gets a call from a Chinese epidemiologist about a ferocious, new viral outbreak that on the surface appears similar to the SARS epidemic of 2003, which has emerged in China, spread far more quickly than the government is admitting to, can also spread asymptomatically, and won’t be long before it reaches other parts of the world. CDC tells HHS, which notifies the NSC, which puts the information in the PDB. The PDB warnings persist into February.  Trump does nothing, except...

Trump holds a rally in Miami, FL (below).
JANUARY 6, 2020
CDC offers help to China, which refuses and declines to send the US a sample of the virus.

JANUARY 7, 2020
HHS convenes inter-agency task force including CDC, HHS, and Dr. Anthony Fauci of the National Institutes of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), with HHS Secretary Alex Azar in charge.

US official with access to coronavirus classified briefings tells the Washington Post, “Donald Trump may not have been expecting this, but a lot of other people in the government were — they just couldn’t get him to do anything about it. The system was blinking red.

JANUARY 8, 2020
CDC issues its first public alert about the virus.

JANUARY 9, 2020
Chinese researchers publicly identify the pneumonia-like virus as a novel coronavirus that is the cause of the pneumonia-like outbreak in Wuhan.

WHO publishes a guidance to help countries perform risk assessments and create response plans to the novel coronavirus. Trump does nothing, except...

Trump holds a rally in Toledo, OH (below).
JANUARY 10, 2020
China announces the first known death from the coronavirus.

JANUARY 11, 2020
Chinese scientists publicly release the genetic sequence of the SARS-CoV-2virus, facilitating the development of a diagnostic testTrump does nothing, except...

JANUARY 14, 2020
Trump holds a rally in Milwaukee, WI (below).
MID-JANUARY, 2020
White House meets with NSC and Department of State to discuss repatriation of US government employees from China.  By the third week of January, US diplomats stationed in Wuhan urgently return to the US and alert the State Department that the public health risk in the region is significant.

HHS draws up contingency plans to enforce the Defense Production Act (DPA).  There is no implementation.

JANUARY 16, 2020
Five days after the Chinese release the coronavirus genome, German researchers at the German Center for Infection Research (DZIF) at Charité – Universitätsmedizin Berlin develop and publish the world’s first publicly available diagnostic test, which forms the basis of the WHO test.

JANUARY 17, 2020
CDC begins to monitor three major airports (San Francisco, Los Angeles, and New York) for passengers arriving from China.  Some passengers report they receive little or no airport screening.

WHO publishes protocol from German researchers with instructions necessary to manufacture coronavirus test.

US health official says the CDC has developed an early version of its own test -- not relying on WHO protocols.

JANUARY 18, 2020.
Secretary Azar of HHS, who has been trying to reach Trump, finally gets through by phone to Mar-a-Lago.  Before he can speak about the virus, Trump interrupts to ask about vaping and when flavored products will be back on the market.  Senior administration officials report Trump seems distracted by perceived enemies and impeachment and is not focused on virus threat.

JANUARY 20, 2020
South Korea reports its first case and quickly mobilizes diagnostic testing, including drive-through screening centers, and quarantines.

CDC confirms its first US case of COVID-19 on the same day in Washington State.  There is no testing mobilization.

JANUARY 21, 2020
CDC announces its own test.  

JANUARY 21 to 22, 2020
Trump attends the World Economic Forum at Davos.

JANUARY 21, 2020
HHS urges the NSC to take control of the virus response, citing “mayhem” at the White House.

JANUARY 22, 2020
Chinese President Xi imposes a “cordon sanitaire” on Wuhan by barring planes and trains from entering or leaving the city and restricting all forms of public transportation.

“That was like, whoa,” a senior US official involved in White House meetings on the crisis told the Washington Post. “That was when the Richter scale hit 8.”

Trump makes his first public comments about the virus in Davos interview.  Asked if worried about a pandemic, he replies, “No. Not at all. And we have it totally under control. It’s one person coming in from China….It’s going to be just fine.”

JANUARY 23, 2020
Singapore bans all inbound flights from Wuhan, China.

WHO releases a statement that includes transmission rates, human-to-human transmission capability, and severity of the virus. 

HHS moves to establish nationwide surveillance system to track the virus, but lacks a diagnostic test that works. 

JANUARY 24, 2020
Trump advisors suggest China is not providing accurate infection statistics.  Trump is in the middle of trade negotiations with China and doesn’t want to upset talks.

Disregarding his advisors’ assessment, Trump tweets, “China has been working very hard to contain the Coronavirus.  The United States greatly appreciates their efforts and transparency.  It will all work out well.  In particular, on behalf of the American People, I want to thank President Xi!”

JANUARY 27, 2020
White House aides meet with Chief-of-Staff Mick Mulvaney to urge senior officials to pay more attention to the virus issue, arguing it could cost Trump the election and dominate life in the US for many months. 

The President’s Coronavirus Task Force is unofficially created and begins daily meetings.  Led by Alex Azar, members include:  Robert O’Brien (NSA), Dr. Robert Redfield (CDC), Dr. Anthony Fauci (NIH), Stephen Biegun (State), Ken Cuccinelli (DHS), Joel Szabat (DOT), Matthew Pottinger (Deputy National Security Advisor), Derek Kan (OMB), Dr. Deborah Birx (State Department), Rob Blair, Joseph Grogan (head of White House Domestic Policy Council), and Christopher Liddell.  The State Department agenda of border controls and repatriation of US citizens from China dominates.  One senior official who attended the meetings says, “It wasn’t a comprehensive, whole-of-government group to run everything.”

South Korean officials inform private companies they should start developing testing kits. 

JANUARY 28, 2020
Infectious disease experts inside and outside the US government form an email group which identifies the coronavirus threat early on and tries to warn the Administration.  (See NYT Red Dawn Emails.)  The “Red Dawn String” includes: Dr. Jerome Adams (Surgeon General of the United States), Dr. Larry G. Padget (State Department), Dr. Anthony Fauci (NIH), Dr. Robert Kadlec (HHS), Dr. Robert Redfield (HHS), Col. Matthew Hepburn (DARPA, DOD), nine other senior officials at HHS, eight senior officials from the DHS, among other academics, private sector employees, former government officials and state officials. 

Sen. Tom Cotton (R-AR), a member of U.S. Senate Select Committee on Intelligence (SSCI), urges Secretaries Mike Pompeo, Alex Azar, and Chad Wolf (acting Secretary of Homeland Security) to implement a targeted travel ban on China and warns the senior White House officials not to trust Chinese authorities. He also urges the White House “to marshal the full resources of the federal government to engineer a vaccine to the virus.”  Trump does nothing, except...

Trump holds a rally in Wildwood, NJ (below).
JANUARY 29, 2020
Sen. Cotton meets with President Trump to discuss his coronavirus concerns.

NSC announces Coronavirus Task Force will now be chaired by Vice President Mike Pence (Trump having demoted Alex Azar after the Messonier dust-up) with Dr. Deborah Birx as “coronavirus response coordinator.”  Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) is put in charge of “key areas,” but Jared Kushner takes over a floor in the FEMA building and creates a shadow team which eventually concentrates on procurement and distribution of critical medical supplies.  Instead of mobilizing for the coming pandemic, the task force is focused on border control and repatriation—keeping  infected people from China out. 

Trade advisor Peter Navarro writes memo to NSC, warning of 500,000 or more American deaths and saying the virus is unlikely to mimic a seasonal flu with low contagion and mortality rates.  Recommends immediate travel ban on China.  See copy here:  Axios Navarro 1/29/20 Memo.

JANUARY 30, 2020
China locks down Hubei Province.

WHO declares global emergency.

HHS Secretary Azar, along with Mick Mulvaney, calls Trump aboard Air Force One and gives the president a blunt warning that the virus could morph into a pandemic.  The president responds that Azar is being “alarmist.” Azar recommends that China be criticized for not being transparent. Trump rejects the idea, with China trade talks ongoing, and does nothing, except...

Trump holds a rally in Des Moines, IA (below).
Trump tells a reporter, “We only have five people.  Hopefully, everything’s going to be great.  We think it's going to have a very good ending for it. So that I can assure you."

Secretary of Agriculture Wilbur Ross tells Fox News, “I don’t want to talk about a victory lap over a very unfortunate, very malignant disease, but the fact is, it does give business yet another thing to consider when they go through their review of their supply chain. It’s another risk factor that people need to take into account. So I think it will help to accelerate the return of jobs to North America.”

JANUARY 31, 2020
So, here comes the Big Bazooka.  After three major airlines halt flights and at Trump's direction, HHS restricts entry to any non-US citizen who was in China within the preceding two weeks.   NOTE:  Ban exempts US citizens, who are not subject to self-quarantine upon entry.  The ban comes after 45 other countries implement travel restrictions on China and includes exemptions that allow tens of thousands of passengers to enter the US.  Moreover, prior to the ban, during the month of January, 300,000 passengers have already entered the US from China, per WaPo Denial and Dysfunction.

LATE JANUARY – FEBRUARY, 2020
Despite the China travel ban, Trump continues to downplay the virus and doesn’t believe it has spread widely throughout the US.  White House officials worry that there are not sufficient tests to determine the scale of the outbreak and call for a more forceful response.  Trump resists.

On February 2, 2020, Trump says, “We pretty much shut it down coming in from China.”

HHS sends two letters to White House Office of Management and Budget (OMB) asking for a shift of $136 million of OMB funds to combat coronavirus.  White House Domestic Policy Council (DPC) and budget hawks rebuff request.

EARLY FEBRUARY, 2020
US spy agencies track outbreaks in Iran, South Korea, Taiwan, Italy, and elsewhere in Europe.

HHS pushes to extend travel ban to Italy and elsewhere in Europe. Fauci endorses, but Treasury Secretary Stephen Mnuchin and others resist because of the economic impact.  Those backing the economy prevail with Trump.

The Federal Drug Administration (FDA) is concerned about relying exclusively on a CDC test and seeks authority to call private diagnostic and pharmaceutical companies for help. Azar at HHS tells them to stand down in favor of his plan:  securing a test from the CDC and then building a national coronavirus surveillance system by relying on an existing network of labs used to track the ordinary flu.  In task force meetings, HHS and CDC push for $100 million to fund the plan, but are shot down because of the cost. The effort collapses when CDC fails to create a working test and the task force rejects HHS’s plan.  

FEBRUARY to MARCH 13, 2020
Hundreds of thousands of passengers enter the US from Europe, without screening or requirement to self-quarantine.

FEBRUARY 4, 2020
China admits shortcomings and deficiencies in its handling of coronavirus.

FEBRUARY 4 and 12, 2020
Sen. Richard Burr (R-NC) and other members of the Senate and House Intelligence Committees receive classified briefings on the coronavirus and its global health implications. Intelligence officials, including the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), tell committee members the virus poses a “serious” threat and it’s necessary to get out ahead of it.

FEBRUARY 5, 2020
CDC begins sending diagnostic tests to a network of 100 state, city, and county public health laboratories.  The labs must verify the tests before using and find they do not work. Of 160,000 tests shipped, only about 200 are usable, making it impossible to get accurate picture of how far and how fast the disease is spreading, in turn making containment (quarantine, contact tracing, and testing) impossible.  (For more on tests and testing, see:  New Yorker Testing and WaPo Testing.)

HHS drafts request for $4 billion to combat coronavirus; OMB officials greet this as an outrage and a shouting match erupts in the Situation Room.  Weeks later, OMB, fearing a surge of cases, offers HHS $2.5 billion.  Congress will later ignore that figure and approve an $8 billion supplemental bill on March 6. 

The one-month delay in funding costs the US a narrow window within which to stockpile ventilators, masks, and other protective equipment, and leaves the US bidding against other nations for scarce materials.  States realize they are on their own and search for supplies, bidding against each other and eventually, FEMA.

FEBRUARY 6, 2020
WHO reports it is shipping 250,000 diagnostic tests to 70 laboratories around the world. 

CDC ships 90 test kits to a few state-run health labs.  The results are inconclusive in trial runs at more than half the labs.  CDC instructs labs to send tests to its Atlanta headquarters, causing further delays in results. 

FEBRUARY 9, 2020
Governors attend black tie affair at White House and get briefing from Fauci and CDC, which rattles them, as it bears no resemblance to what Trump has been saying.

FEBRUARY 10, 2020
Trump proposes 16% cut in CDC funding 11 days after WHO declares COVID-19 a public health emergencyHe also...

Trump holds a rally in Manchester, NH (below).
Trump tells rally supporters, “By April, you know, in theory, when it gets a little warmer, it miraculously goes away.  I think the virus is going to be--it’s going to be fine.”

FEBRUARY 13, 2020
The day after Sen. Burr’s second intelligence briefing on the virus, he and his wife sell 33 different stocks collectively worth $628,000 to $1.7 million, including as much as $150,000 in two hotel chains.  (I mention this because it indicates how specific the internal government warnings were.)

FEBRUARY 14, 2020
Trump says, “We have a very small number of people in the country, right now, with it.  It’s like around 12.  Many of them are getting better.  Some are fully recovered already.  So we’re in very good shape.”

MID-FEBRUARY, 2020
Jeremy Konyndyk, who led the US government’s response to international disasters at USAID from 2013 to 2017, attends meeting in mid-February with top Trump Administration officials in which the only topic of conversation is the travel bans.  “I thought, ‘Holy Jesus!’ Where’s the discussion on protecting our hospitals? Where’s the discussion on high-risk populations, on surveillance so we can detect where the virus is. I knew then that the president had set the priority, the bureaucracy was following it, but it was the wrong priority.”

The coronavirus begins to spread to New York from Europe. 

Testing continues to be an issue.  Scarcity leads to severe limitations on who can be tested, causing a lack of meaningful data on the spread of the virus and leading Fauci and CDC to say in a Situation Room meeting that there is no evidence yet of community spread. Fauci later concedes that his views changed on community spread as he learned more.

FEBRUARY 16-24, 2020
WHO sends a team, including two US experts, to China.  (This makes the Trump Administration's argument--that because WHO's China office hid information and misled the US, the US is justified in cutting off WHO funding--very curious.)

FEBRUARY 17, 2020
Red Dawn email group worries it will be hard to convince governors and mayors to require non-pharmaceutical interventions (NPIs), such as school closures, social distancing and lockdowns, and urges the federal government to take the lead to give states and cities cover. Trump does not take the lead, but...

FEBRUARY 19, 2020
Trump holds a rally in Phoenix, AZ (below).
Trump tells rally supporters, “I think it’s going to work out fine.  I think that when we get into April, in the warmer weather, that has a very negative effect on that and that type of a virus. So let’s see what happens, but I think it’s going to work out fine.”

FEBRUARY 20, 2020
Trump holds a rally in Colorado Springs, CO (below).
FEBRUARY 21, 2020
Dr. Kadlec (HHS) reportedly convenes an urgent meeting of the White House coronavirus task force in an effort to determine not if, but when, the country will need to lock down to prevent the spread of the virus.  Trump does not consider a lock-down.  Instead...

Trump holds a rally in Las Vegas, NV (below).
FEBRUARY 23, 2020
Italy begins to see evidence of a major outbreak in the Lombardy region.

Red Dawn email group concludes containment is no longer an option in the US and decides to recommend public support for mitigation to Trump. Before they can discuss it with the President, another official (Dr. Nancy Messonnier of CDC) goes public with a warning, sending the stock market down sharply and angering Trump (See February 25, 2020). The meeting is canceled and it will be another three weeks before Trump calls for mitigation.

Navarro writes second memo, this one to Trump:  "There is an increasing probability of a full-blown COVID-19 pandemic that could infect as many as 100 million Americans, with a loss of life of as many as 1-2 million souls." He recommends an "immediate supplemental appropriation of at least $3 billion" to support efforts at prevention, treatment, inoculation and diagnostics.  Specifically, he describes expected needs for "Personal Protective Equipment," (PPE) estimating that over a four-to-six month period, "We can expect to need at least a billion face masks, 200,000 Tyvek suits, and 11,000 ventilator circuits, and 25,000 PAPRs (powered air-purifying respirators)."  Trump takes no action.

FEBRUARY 24, 2020.
After an outbreak in Daegu, South Korea, Camp Humphreys, a US base of more than 37,000, the largest overseas Army garrison and home to the main military headquarters on the divided peninsula, goes on high alert and partial lock-down.  Stars and Stripes.  The Commander in Chief does nothing.

Iran becomes a hotspot; WHO Director warns of a possible pandemic.

Trump tweets the outbreak is "very much under control in the USA. We are in contact with everyone and all relevant countries. CDC & World Health have been working hard and very smart. Stock Market starting to look very good to me!”

U.S. stocks decline following reports of more cases of coronavirus in China and around the globe.

Alarmed by reports that healthy people could be asymptomatic carriers and spreading the virus, Dr. Kadlec at HHS gives Trump a plan titled, “Four Steps to Mitigation,” and tells the President his Administration needs to begin preparing the public for historically extraordinary measures.  The President does nothing.

FEBRUARY 25, 2020
Nancy Messonnier, the CDC’s top official on respiratory diseases, tells reporters that the coronavirus is likely to spread within communities in the US and that “disruptions to everyday life might be severe.”  Trump, on Air Force One returning from India, is so angered by Messonnier’s comment and its impact on share prices that he demotes her boss, HHS Secretary Alex Azar, on the spot, appoints Vice President Mike Pence in his stead, and effectively puts CDC under a gag order (See February 26, 2020).

Trump tweets, “CDC and my Administration are doing a GREAT job of handling Coronavirus.”

Trump responds to a reporter, “I think that’s a problem that’s going to go away…They have studied it. They know very much. In fact, we’re very close to a vaccine.”

The President’s National Economic Council Director Larry Kudlow is asked about Dr. Messonnier’s comments. He tells CNBC, “We have contained this. I won’t say airtight, but it’s pretty close to airtight. I don’t think it’s going to be an economic tragedy at all.” He also says he sees no problems with supply and availability of medical equipment.

FEBRUARY 26, 2020
The push to convince Trump of the urgent need for more assertive action stalls and the focus turns to messaging.  With Pence in charge, statements and media appearances by health officials like Dr. Fauci must be coordinated through Pence. It will be more than three weeks before Trump announces on March 16 serious social distancing efforts, a lost period during which the number of confirmed coronavirus cases in the US grows from 15 to 4,226.

Trump says, “When you have 15 people—and the 15 within a couple of days is going to be down to close to zero—that’s a pretty good job we’ve done. We’re going very substantially down, not up.”

Sen. Kelly Loeffler (R-GA) also receives Senate virus briefings in early February. She and her husband, the Chairman of the NY Stock Exchange, report 27 stock sales beginning on February 26 and continuing until March 11, worth up to millions of dollars.  Sen. Loeffler’s husband also purchases stocks in a major PPE provider four times in February and March, as revealed by Sen. Loeffler’s financial disclosure forms.  (Again, I mention this to show how specific the internal government warnings were.)

FEBRUARY 27, 2020
“The immediate risk to the public remains low,” says HHS Secretary Alex Azar in testimony before the House Committee on Ways and Means. “It will look and feel to the American people more like a severe flu season in terms of the interventions and approaches you will see.”

The same day, Sen. Burr tells a private luncheon the coronavirus is “much more aggressive in its transmission than anything that we have seen in recent history” and “is probably more akin to the 1918 pandemic” in which 50 million or more people died worldwide. He counsels the donor group to reconsider sending employees to Europe, predicts that schools may close down, and the US will mobilize the military to aid in the domestic response.

Testing continues to be a problem.  US officials discover CDC is failing to meet basic quality-control standards.  FDA’s director for devices and radiological health tells CDC that if it were subjected to the same scrutiny as a privately run lab, “I would shut you down.”

LATE FEBRUARY, 2020
By the end of February, WHO has shipped tests to nearly 60 countries. The US is not among them, even though it has no working test.  To date, despite Congressional inquiries, including pointed questions from Rep. Katie Porter (D-CA), there has been no answer as to why the US did not take advantage of the WHO test while it was developing and revising its own.  Politico

FEBRUARY 28, 2020
Federal officials revise the CDC test and begin to loosen FDA rules to allow labs at universities, hospitals, and private companies to develop their own diagnostic test.

Dr. Carter Mecher, senior medical adviser to the Department of Veterans’ Affairs (VA), emails the Red Dawn email chain and warns that the US has a narrow window to implement non-pharmaceutical interventions (such as social distancing), based on data from the 1918 Spanish Influenza. “And we are flying blind,” he adds.  Trump does nothing, except...

Trump holds a rally in North Charleston, SC (below).
Trump tells rally supporters, “It’s going to disappear.  One day, it’s like a miracle, it will disappear. We’re ordering a lot of supplies.  We’re ordering a lot of, uh, elements that frankly we wouldn’t be ordering unless it was something like this.  But we’re ordering a lot of different elements of medical.”

Trump also tweets about the virus, “DEMOCRATS. THIS IS THEIR HOAX.”

FEBRUARY 29, 2020
The US records its first coronavirus death and announces travel restrictions for Italy, Iran, and South Korea.

Dr. Fauci says on the Today Show that Americans do not need to change their daily practices and the current risk is low, but could change if there is evidence of community spread.  (At that time, there was no testing widely available, so community spread was masked.)

FDA releases guidance allowing private labs to develop their own diagnostics.

EARLY MARCH, 2020
The FDA relaxes rules regulating whether hospitals and labs can create their own tests. 

MARCH 2, 2020
Slow pace of enacting mitigation measures alarms Red Dawn email chain, as cities and states are hard hit. 

Trump asks a reporter, “You take a solid flu vaccine, you don’t think that could have an impact, or much of an impact, on corona?”

Trump falsely claims at a press briefing that a vaccine will be readily available. “We’re moving aggressively to accelerate the process of developing a vaccine. A lot of good things are happening and they’re happening very fast. I said, ‘Do me a favor, speed it up, speed it up.’ And they will — they’re working really hard and quick.” The president suggests the vaccine may be ready “over the next few months,” but Fauci quickly interjects to say, it would be “a year to a year and a half.” Trump continues to hold out the false hope of an imminent vaccine and therapy, while...

Trump holds a rally in Charlotte, NC (below).
He tells rally supporters, “We had a great meeting today with a lot of the great companies and they’re going to have vaccines, I think relatively soon. And they’re going to have something that makes you better and that’s going to actually take place, we think, even sooner.”

MARCH 3, 2020
Pence announces that CDC will lift federal restrictions on testing for the coronavirus. He says, “Today we will issue new guidance from the CDC that will make it clear that any American can be tested, no restrictions, subject to doctor’s orders.”  (Note the use of the future tense.)

MARCH 4, 2020
Trump says, “If we have thousands or hundreds of thousands of people that get better just by, you know, sitting around and even going to work—some of them go to work, but they get better.”

MARCH 5, 2020


Trump claims in a tweet, “I NEVER said people that are feeling sick should go to work.”

And later, “The United States…has, as of now, only 129 cases…and 11 deaths. We are working very hard to keep these numbers as low as possible!”  (See March 6, 2020 regarding the Grand Princess.)

MARCH 6, 2020
Complaints of testing scarcity and critical shortages of swabs, machines to extract genetic material from swabs, reagents, and personnel continue. 

Trump says, “I think we’re doing a really good job in this country at keeping it down…a tremendous job at keeping it down.”

Trump visits CDC in Atlanta wearing a “Keep America Great” hat, boasts that CDC tests are nearly perfect, and says, “I like this stuff. I really get it. People here are surprised that I understand it. Every one of these doctors says, ‘How do you know so much about this?’ Maybe I have a natural ability. Maybe I should have done that instead of running for president. Anybody right now, and yesterday, anybody that needs a test gets a test. They’re there.  And the tests are beautiful…the tests are all perfect like the letter was perfect. The transcription was perfect. Right? This was not as perfect as that but pretty good.”

This claim about universal availability of testing is untrue, as the CDC has no nationwide testing capability, and never did.  NOTE: as of April 12, 2020, the CDC still warns that it may “be difficult to find a place to get tested.”

The Grand Princess cruise ship, with 2,422 passengers and 1,111 crew on board, waits off the coast of San Francisco after 21 people test positive for the virus. Trump says the experts he consults, including Pence, want to take people off the ship. However, Trump says he doesn’t want the passengers raising the total case count in the US. "I like the numbers being where they are. I don't need to have the numbers double because of one ship that wasn't our fault." 

MARCH 7, 2020
Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) works with Secretary Mnuchin all weekend to craft relief bill, but Sen. Mitch McConnell (R-KY) sends the Senate home without a vote.  The President is not involved in the negotiations.

Trump tells reporters, “No, I’m not concerned at all.  We’ve done a great job.”

MARCH 8, 2020
Trump tweets, “We have a perfectly coordinated and fine tuned plan at the White House for our attack on CoronaVirus.”

MARCH 9, 2020
Trump tweets that the common flu kills tens of thousands each year and “nothing is shut down, life & the economy go on.”

And later, “This blindsided the world.”

MARCH 10, 2020
Pence announces that over 1 million tests have been distributed and promises that 4 million would be distributed by the end of the week.  (NOTE the use of the aspirational tense, "would be." As of April 12, the US has conducted only 2 million tests and States continue to report testing shortages.)

With 949 Americans infected and 30 dead, Trump says, “And it will just go away.  Just stay calm.  It will go away.”

MARCH 11, 2020
WHO declares the coronavirus outbreak is a pandemic.

Trump addresses the nation and announces limits on European flights to go into effect on March 13— but still no move to curb gatherings in cities where the virus has spread, angering and alarming the experts on the Red Dawn email chain.  In the address, Trump does not call for social distancing, school closures, or other measures, responding to views of his business friends and others, the New York Times reports.  Trump makes misstatements about US policy in his address, stating that the policy will “apply to the tremendous amount of trade and cargo.” The White House subsequently has to clarify that trade and cargo are exempt from the ban.

Trump says the US has taken early intense action, and commends the “dramatically fewer cases of the virus in the United States than are now present in Europe.”

Members of the Red Dawn email chain criticize the president’s decisions in his national address.  Tom Bossert (President Trump’s former Homeland Security Advisor) writes: “Can anyone justify the European travel restriction, scientifically? Seriously, is there any benefit? I don’t see it, but I’m hoping there is something I don’t know.” James Lawler (professor of internal medicine) replies, “Fuck no. This is the absolute wrong move.” Richard Hatchett (CEO of Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations) chimes in, “No justification that I can see.”

Dr. Eva Lee responds, “I was hoping he would mention about schools, government and private sector tele-work, community gatherings, things that really need everyone to actively engage in. And also extra resources for healthcare providers. We really need to protect providers who care for covid-19 patients.”

MARCH 12, 2020
Professor Lawler writes in the Red Dawn email chain, “We are making every misstep leaders initially made in table-tops at the outset of pandemic planning in 2006. We had systematically addressed all of these and had a plan that would work – and has worked in Hong Kong/Singapore. We have thrown 15 years of institutional learning out the window and are making decisions based on intuition.”


MARCH 13, 2020
At a press briefing, Trump insists, without offering evidence, and in apparent ignorance of the fact that the coronavirus wasn’t present in the US between 2008-2016, that his administration’s failure to test is Barack Obama’s fault.  “No, I don't take responsibility at all,” Trump says defiantly, pointing to an unspecified “set of circumstances” and “rules, regulations and specifications from a different time.” Politico.

Trump falsely announces a new website to link Americans to testing sites: “Google is going to develop a website … to determine if a test is warranted and to facilitate testing at a nearby convenient location. … Google has 1,700 engineers working on this right now. They have made tremendous progress.” Google Communications corrects the president’s statement later that day.

MARCH 13, 2020
With 8,940 Americans infected and 150 dead, Trump finally declares the coronavirus to be a national emergency.

Trump’s ban on travel into the US from 26 European countries goes into effect; applies to non-citizens who have been in a Schengen country in the preceding 14 days.  The UK and Ireland are exempt, even though the UK has among the highest numbers of reported cases in the region.

MID-MARCH, 2020
Based on a review of federal purchasing contracts by the Associated Press, the Trump Administration only starts to place bulk orders on necessary medical equipment in mid-March.

Trump reaches out to Stephen Schwartzman of Blackstone Group, a private equity firm, to understand potential effect of a lockdown on the stock market.  During an Oval Office meeting, Mnuchin says the economy would be ravaged by a shutdown.  A national security adviser says the economy will be destroyed regardless, if officials do nothing.  Reflecting on this later, Trump says, “Everybody questioned it [a shutdown] for a while, not everybody, but a good portion questioned it. They said, ‘Let’s keep it open. Let’s ride it.’”

Red Dawn email participants are upset when CDC questions the value of closing schools. Governors ignore this advice, and most schools in the US are shut, largely without federal leadership.

MARCH 16, 2020
Governors beg Trump to unleash the full might of the US government on the crisis in tests and PPE.  He responds, “Respirators, ventilators, all of the equipment – try getting it yourselves. We will be backing you, but try getting it yourselves. Point of sales, much better, much more direct if you can get it yourself. ” (For more on missteps in the federal PPE response, see AirMail.)

Asked about his repeated comments that everything is under control, Trump says, “If you’re talking about the virus, no, that’s not under control for any place in the world….I was talking about what we’re doing is under control, but I’m not talking about the virus.”
MARCH 16, 2020
Trump issues The President’s Coronavirus Guidelines for America—15 Days to Slow the Spread.  The trial set of non-mandatory national guidelines discourage unnecessary travel, congregating in groups of more than 10, and visits to nursing homes and long-term care facilities, and recommend home-schooling.  The guidelines are suggestions, not requirements, and fall short of a national quarantine and internal travel restrictions, which many health officials had urged.
The Guidelines are extended through April 30, 2020. Note from Just Security Timeline: The Guidelines appear to be outdated. Even though the presidential task force later pivots to telling the public to try to stay home even if well or asymptomatic, the first line in the president’s guidelines states: “If you feel sick, stay home.”

MARCH 17, 2020
Trump Administration announces strict southern border controls and Trump falsely claims, “I’ve felt it was a pandemic long before it was called a pandemic."

MARCH 18, 2020
Trump signs an Executive Order allowing for use of the Defense Production Act, but the President and Vice President make statements suggesting the administration will not use the Act.  To date, the US has not compelled any US corporation to produce masks, ventilators, or other PPE.  It has, however, used its wealth and purchasing power to outbid States and other countries for those materials.

At his daily press briefing, Trump insists he is justified in branding the coronavirus pandemic as the “Chinese Virus,” saying, “It’s not racist at all. No, not at all. It comes from China, that’s why. It comes from China. I want to be accurate.” 

He adds he doesn’t believe China was “inflicting” the coronavirus upon Americans, but argues that Beijing “could have given us a lot earlier notice. I know where it came from. I don’t know if you’d say China is to blame. Certainly we didn’t get an early run on it. It would have been helpful if we knew about it earlier. But it comes from China. It’s not a question about that. Nobody’s questioning it.”

Yes, I think we can all agree on one thing:  Trump certainly didn’t get an early run on it. 

What this timeline makes crystal clear to me is that the US was not ready for the coronavirus pandemic, or any other pandemic, even though it was advised of that lack of readiness on January 13, 2017--three years ago.  

The Trump Administration had three years to prepare, from January 13, 2017 to March 13, 2020, and yet it did nothing to keep Americans safe from a pandemic during that three-year period, except:  (1) monitor three airports for passengers arriving from China, starting on January 17, 2020, (2) cancel some flights from China on January 31, 2020, (3) restrict travel from Iran, Italy, and South Korea on February 29, 2020, (4) cancel some flights from Europe on March 13, 2020, and (5) issue some non-mandatory Guidelines on March 16, 2020.  And in the critical 70 days from formal notification of a novel coronavirus on January 3, 2020 until the issuance of mitigation Guidelines on March 16, 2020, the Trump Administration monitored three airports and restricted some flights.  Big F*ing Deal.
Had the Trump Administration acted sooner and specifically, had it made The President’s Coronavirus Guidelines for America -  15 Days to Slow the Spread mandatory across all 50 states in late January or early February, 2020, the number of infections and deaths would have been lower.  How much lower?  It’s difficult to be precise, but the interactive graph above (try it!) from an opinion piece in the New York Times at NYT Graph suggests many lives could have been saved by acting sooner.  Note, too, that without mandatory, national social distancing guidelines in place, and without the ability to test their citizens, States were left on their own to decide what to do.  Some, like California and Washington, did well and imposed their own social distancing measures at an early date.  Others, like New York, waited too long and are now paying a very big price.  

It’s tragic.  It’s irresponsible.  It was foreseeable and foreseen.  For a president obsessed with winning, he's a loser.  And for a man who has branded himself a wartime president, the question remains:  Does that make him a war criminal?

Keep it real!  Wear your mask.
Marilyn

 

Comments

  1. Amazing research M!
    Nightmare. And it will be for months (maybe even years) to come.
    I hear they are still allowed to golf in Florida. Maybe a hungry alligator will take our avid golfer?

    ReplyDelete

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