
President wants Congress to discuss how to use armed forces
Tuesday, October 4, 2005; Posted: 2:58 p.m. EDT (18:58 GMT)
President Bush said he was concerned about an avian flu outbreak
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Health experts fear avian flu will mutate (2:07)
Deaths and illness in Jakarta raise specter of bird flu epidemic (1:37)
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Manage Alerts | What Is This? WASHINGTON (CNN) -- President Bush said
Tuesday that the possibility of an avian flu pandemic is among the
reasons he wants Congress to give him the power to use the nation's military
in law enforcement roles in the United States.
"I'm concerned about what an avian flu outbreak could mean for the
United States and the world," he told reporters during a Rose Garden news
conference.
Such an deadly event would raise difficult questions, such as how a
quarantine might be enforced, he said.
"One option is the use of a military that's able to plan and move," he
said. "So that's why I put it on the table. I think it's an important
debate for Congress to have."
People who catch the worst strain of avian flu can die of viral
pneumonia and acute respiratory distress, according to mayoclinic.com.
The disease has killed tens of millions of birds in Asia.
Last week, the U.N.'s health agency, the World Health Organization,
sought to ease fears that the disease could kill as many as 150 million
people worldwide.
"We're not going to know how lethal the next pandemic is going to be
until the pandemic begins," WHO influenza spokesman Dick Thompson said,
according to The Associated Press.
The consequences of an outbreak in the United States need to be
addressed before catastrophe strikes, Bush said.
The president said that he sees things differently than he did as
governor of Texas. "I didn't want the president telling me how to be the
commander in chief of the Texas Guard," he said. "But Congress needs to
take a look at circumstances that may need to vest the capacity of the
president to move beyond that debate. And one such catastrophe or one
such challenge could be an avian flu outbreak."
Should avian flu mutate and gain the ability to spread easily from
human to human, world leaders and scientists would need rapid access to
accurate information to be able to stem its spread, he said.
"We need to know, on a real-time basis, the facts, so the world's
scientific community could analyze the facts," he said.
Bush said he has spoken with Anthony Fauci, director of the National
Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, about work toward a
vaccine, but that means of prevention remains a distant hope.
"I take this issue very seriously," Bush said. "I'm not predicting an
outbreak, but just suggesting to you we ought to be thinking about it,
and we are."
Absent an effective vaccine, public health officials likely would try
to stem the disease's spread by isolating people who had been exposed to
it. Such a move could require the military, he said.
"I think the president ought to have all options on the table," Bush
said, then corrected himself, "all assets on the table -- to be able to
deal with something this significant."
The Posse Comitatus Act of 1878 bans the military from participating in
police-type activity on U.S. soil.
Bush began discussing the possibility of changing the law last month,
in the aftermath of the government's sluggish response to civil unrest
following Hurricane Katrina.
"I want there to be a robust discussion about the best way for the
federal government, in certain extreme circumstances, to be able to rally
assets for the good of the people," he told reporters September 26.
Gene Healy, a senior editor at the conservative Cato Institute, said
Bush would risk undermining "a fundamental principle of American law" by
tinkering with the act, which does not hinder the military's ability to
respond to a crisis.
"What it does is set a high bar for the use of federal troops in a
policing role," he wrote in a commentary on the group's Web site. "That
reflects America's traditional distrust of using standing armies to
enforce order at home, a distrust that's well-justified."
Healy said soldiers are not trained as police officers, and putting
them in a civilian law enforcement role "can result in serious collateral
damage to American life and liberty."
Last month, White House spokesman Scott McClellan said Bush "wants to
make sure that we learn the lessons from Hurricane Katrina," including
the use of the military in "a severe, catastrophic-type event."
"The Department of Defense would assume the responsibility for the
situation, and come in with an overwhelming amount of resources and assets,
to help stabilize the situation," McClellan said.
The World Health Organization has reported 116 cases of avian flu in
humans, all of them in Asia. More than half of them have been fatal, it
said.
On Thursday, the Senate added $4 billion to a Pentagon spending bill to
head off the threat of an outbreak of avian flu among humans. The bulk
of the money -- $3 billion -- would be used to stockpile Tamiflu, an
antiviral drug that has proved effective against the H5N1 virus -- the
strain blamed for six deaths in Indonesia last week.
U.S. health agencies have about 2 million doses of Tamiflu, enough to
treat about 1 percent of the population. The money added by the Senate
would build that stockpile to cover about 50 percent of the population.