Actions speak louder than words for U.S.
Guardian News Service, London
When pushed to do so, the Bush administration will feign concern for the world's poor. But its actions speak louder than its words. The intervention by vice-president Dick Cheney last week to torpedo a deal to get cheap drugs into poor countries whose populates have been consumed by epidemics was a cold- hearted piece of realpolitik.
Forget the honey-coated pledges of support for development and warm declarations that global prosperity must be shared. The United States was the only country out of 144 to oppose an agreement that would have relaxed global patent rules on treatments. The richest nation on the earth backed the arguments of the drug lobby over the cries of the weak and wasted. In doing so the U.S. has emptied the current round of trade talks of a meaningful and substantial proof that globalization could help the poor.
The White House does not want developing nations to be able to get hold of cheap drugs in a self-declared public health emergency. It acknowledges the big three killers -- Aids, malaria and tuberculosis -- are serious enough pandemics that copyright could be suspended.
But it does not want other deadly diseases, such as diabetes or asthma, to infringe corporate patents. While the rest of the world had conceded this point, recognizing the moral imperative to help those who cannot help themselves, the U.S. would not. Fearful that America's trade representatives would save too many lives at the expense of corporate profits, Cheney stepped in to block any agreement.
Big Pharma helps bankroll the Bush White House, and what it wants, it gets. The U.S. drug companies demanded protection from their rivals in Brazil, India and Thailand, which can churn out copies of their treatments at a fraction of the cost.
This, claims the Bush administration, would undermine the patent system and discourage drug development, which relies on big profits. Worse still, if generic drug-makers based in industrializing nations were able to manufacture and then export drugs to treat a wide range of diseases, they would soon be selling many medicines for which affluent consumers pay rather a lot.
The U.S. argument is seriously undermined by the fact that no other country agrees with it enough to wreck a deal for affordable medicines.
In reality, George Bush is not remotely interested in helping poorer countries on their terms or on those negotiated in a multilateral arena. The extreme unilateralist position in this case has been taken to induce other countries to align more closely with U.S. interests. This should be resisted, strongly. There are plenty of reasons to doubt whether the leader of the most powerful nation in the world has benign ambitions for the world.
There is little sign the president will make serious efforts to cut poverty, tackle disease or face the environmental challenges of the future. Not content with scuppering a deal on cheap drugs, Washington has also refused to contribute its fair share to a United Nations global fund to fight Aids, TB and malaria.
If proof were required of the United States' priorities, it might be found in the fact that America could meet its goal of raising foreign assistance to 0.7 percent of GNP, but the US$60 billion required to do so has been directed to the military.
Denying impoverished countries access to life-saving medicines fits a pattern. What Columbia University's Jeffrey Sachs calls the weapons of mass salvation will not be deployed by Bush. By declining this responsibility, America will ensure that peace and stability in the world are harder to attain than chaos and disorder.