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How COVID-19 is reshaping U.S. national security policy.

Margaret Kosal
Published in: Politics and the life sciences : the journal of the Association for Politics and the Life Sciences (2023)
In the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, the United States is actively reshaping parts of its national security enterprise. This article explores the underlying politics, with a specific interest in the context of biosecurity, biodefense, and bioterrorism strategy, programs, and response, as the United States responds to the most significant outbreak of an emerging infectious disease in over a century. How the implicit or tacit failure to recognize the political will and political decision-making connected to warfare and conflict for biological weapons programs in these trends is explored. Securitization of public health has been a focus of the literature over the past half century. This recent trend may represent something of an inverse: an attempt to treat national security interests as public health problems. A hypothesis is that the most significant underrecognized problem associated with COVID-19 is disinformation and the weakening of confidence in institutions, including governments, and how adversaries may exploit that blind spot.
Keyphrases
  • public health
  • global health
  • coronavirus disease
  • sars cov
  • quality improvement
  • decision making
  • infectious diseases
  • mental health
  • systematic review
  • healthcare
  • respiratory syndrome coronavirus