General: Sending military to fight Ebola is ‘misuse’ of soldiers
Ex-Delta Force commander stresses ‘great risk’ of infection
09/17/2014 www.birdflu666.wordpress.com
In Front Page,Health,U.S.,World |
Excerpts:
Sending American troops to combat Ebola in Liberia is “an absolute misuse of the U.S. military,” contends retired Lt. Gen. William G. Boykin.
“The U.S. military does not have specific training regarding how to handle a medical emergency like Ebola,” he said.
“It’s rather obvious there is a great risk the U.S. military going into Liberia to fight Ebola will end up getting infected themselves.”
He talked through the steps the U.S. military would have to take to protect troops from contracting the disease.
“One of the first things the U.S. military will have to do is to set up centers where the soldiers can be sterilized and cleaned, to try to reduce the risk to them. But, I think, the U.S. military going into Liberia are going to be clearly at risk of contracting Ebola.”
Even with precautions such as these, Boykin emphasized the risk, not only to the health of the U.S. military deployed to Liberia but also to civilians back in the United States.
“Then, let’s say two or three soldiers in a battalion get Ebola. What are you going to do with them?” he asked. “Obviously, you’re going to have to bring them back to the United States.”
Boykin emphasized the military overburdened.
“This is a terrible misuse of the U.S. military, and it comes at a terrible time when not only is the military really stretched thin, such that the U.S. military can not take on another mission, it comes at a time when we are reducing the military’s funding and the military’s numbers,” he said.
He also questioned why the first line of defense would not be the United Nations peacekeepers.
“If military are required to combat the Ebola outbreak in Liberia, then the first troops that should be involved are the 6,000 United Nations peacekeeping forces that are already in the country,” he said.
“It doesn’t make sense.”
Read more at http://www.wnd.com/2014/09/boykin-sending-military-to-fight-ebola-m...