Obama, who has called the outbreak a
national security priority, will outline new steps to address the crisis during
a visit to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta.
According to senior administration
officials, the ramped up military effort centers on command and control,
logistics, training and engineering support.
With the new measures the United
States is significantly ramping up its response, and the next steps will focus
on command and control, logistics, training and engineering support.
They include:
-Creating a joint force command headquarters
in Monrovia, Liberia. By end of the week, the U.S. will have general officer in
place to lead the effort, known as "Operation United Assistance."
-Providing engineers to build
treatment units. Up to 17 separate facilities with 100 beds each.
-Training support for health care
workers, up to 500 health care workers per week, for as long as needed
(although budgeting plans for a six-month period). Training will come from U.S.
military medical personnel. The administration hopes to have force on the
ground in a couple of weeks. After this scaling up is done, the expectation is
for there to be up to 3,000 Defense Department personnel on the ground in
support of the joint force command.
-Working to boost a messaging
campaign to train households on how to protect themselves and help family
members that may present symptoms. To pay for the mission, the administration
is asking for $88 million be added to the CR; $175 million has already been
dedicated. The Defense Department has requested the reprogramming of $500
million in unobligated funds to be put towards the Ebola response.
As of Sept. 7, there were 4,366
probable, confirmed and suspected cases in the current Ebola outbreak in West
Africa, with 2,218 deaths, according to the World Health Organization. The
countries affected are Guinea, Liberia, Nigeria, Senegal and Sierra Leone.
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