Musk says DOGE ‘restored’ Ebola prevention effort. Officials say that’s not true.
USAID’s initiatives to fight Ebola and other diseases have been gutted, current and former agency officials said
Elon
Musk shows off a shirt that says “Tech Support” while speaking at the
first Cabinet meeting of President Donald Trump's second term at the
White House on Wednesday. (Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post)
Elon
Musk on Wednesday acknowledged that the U.S. DOGE Service “accidentally
canceled” efforts by the U.S. Agency for International Development to
prevent the spread of Ebola — but the billionaire entrepreneur insisted
that the initiative was quickly restored.
“We
will make mistakes. We won’t be perfect. But when we make a mistake,
we’ll fix it very quickly,” Musk said at a meeting of President Donald
Trump’s Cabinet officials, defending his group’s fast-moving approach to
canceling federal programs in a bid for cost savings. “So we restored
the Ebola prevention immediately. And there was no interruption.”
Yet
current and former USAID officials said that Musk was wrong: USAID’s
Ebola prevention efforts have been largely halted since Musk and his
DOGE allies moved last month to gut the global-assistance agency and
freeze its outgoing payments, they said. The teams and contractors that
would be deployed to fight an Ebola outbreak have been dismantled, they
added. While the Trump administration issued a waiver to allow USAID to
respond to an Ebola outbreak in Uganda last month, partner organizations
were not promptly paid for their work, and USAID’s own efforts were
sharply curtailed compared to past efforts to fight Ebola outbreaks.
“There
have been no efforts to ‘turn on’ anything in prevention” of Ebola and
other diseases, said Nidhi Bouri, who served as a senior USAID official
during the Biden administration and oversaw the agency’s response to
health-care outbreaks.
Last
month’s Ebola outbreak has now receded, but some former U.S. officials
say that’s in part because of past investments in prevention efforts
that helped position Uganda to respond — and that other countries remain
far more vulnerable.
Bouri
said her former USAID team of 60 people working on disease-response had
been cut to about six staffers as of earlier this week. She called the
recent USAID response to Uganda’s Ebola outbreak a “one-off,” far
diminished from “the full suite” of activities that the agency
historically would mount, such as ramping up efforts to monitor whether
the disease had spread to neighboring countries.
“The
full spectrum — the investments in disease surveillance, the
investments in what we mobilize … moving commodities, supporting lab
workers — that capacity is now a tenth of what it was,” Bouri said.
Other
current and former USAID officials, speaking on the condition of
anonymity to discuss internal operations, agreed with Bouri’s
assessment.
“There
was a waiver for Ebola, but USAID funds have never been back online,”
said a current official. “USAID has been frozen: staff and money.”
“If
there was a need to respond to Ebola, it would be a disaster assistance
response team, or DART,” said one former official. “There is no longer a
capability to send a DART or support one from Washington. Many of those
people are contractors who were let go at the very beginning.”
The White House declined to comment on whether USAID’s Ebola-response efforts had been fully restored.
“Uganda’s
Ebola outbreak occurred on the same day as the foreign aid freeze.
Despite that, the waiver for assistance in addressing the outbreak was
quickly reinstated,” an administration official said in a statement.
The
dustup over Ebola prevention represents the latest flash point as
Democrats, current and former federal officials and others warn of the
harms of DOGE’s “move fast and break things” approach. A federal judge has repeatedly told the Trump administration to restore USAID funds, setting a deadline of Wednesday night to get money out the door again. Some Trump political officials have also grown weary of DOGE’s approach, saying that the group’s moves have created additional headaches for Cabinet departments.
Musk has defended his team’s approach as a necessary strategy to overcome bureaucratic inertia and cut government spending.
“We
do need to move quickly if we are to achieve a trillion-dollar deficit
reduction in financial year 2026,” Musk said Wednesday, as the
entrepreneur addressed agency leaders. But he also acknowledged the need
to preserve ongoing public health efforts. “I think we all want Ebola
prevention,” Musk said.
Ebola
is a severe and often fatal virus that can cause fever, vomiting and
internal and external bleeding, alarming global health leaders who have
worked to contain several recent outbreaks. More than 11,000 people died
in an Ebola epidemic in West Africa that began in 2014 and eventually spread to the United States. Symptoms and complications in survivors can also linger for months.
Public
health experts said that there are risks in moving too quickly to
dismantle the federal teams and programs fighting disease around the
world, citing a mystery illness that has killed more than 50 people and is currently spreading in the Democratic Republic of Congo. They also warned that the Trump administration is broadly weakening
the nation’s public health infrastructure domestically as well, citing
initiatives that target funds and programs at the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention, the National Institutes of Health and other
health agencies.
“U.S.
investments in foreign aid, CDC surveillance and global health programs
and in NIH-funded research are the front-line defense for the American
public,” said Paul Friedrichs, who oversaw the Biden administration’s
pandemic-preparedness efforts. “They also benefit people worldwide by
reducing the risk of spread of a lethal disease like Ebola.”
Beth
Cameron, a senior adviser to the Pandemic Center at the Brown
University School of Public Health, described the Trump administration’s
recent actions as “a double whammy” to global efforts to prevent Ebola,
saying that USAID’s “critical” functions to stop outbreaks abroad had
been frozen or gutted.
“We
have the programs and the people who were working on Ebola and other
deadly-disease prevention capacity in other countries not able to do
their jobs because their work is frozen, and many of the people have
been put on administrative leave,” said Cameron, who worked on
biosecurity efforts in the Bush, Obama, Trump and Biden administrations.
“And we have a response that is, at best, less efficient, because the
implementers are not able to get reliably paid.”
Jeremy
Konyndyk, who oversaw USAID’s Ebola prevention efforts during the Obama
administration, said he interpreted Musk’s comments and the
administration’s recent Ebola efforts in the context of mounting
criticism that DOGE had moved too quickly to cut public health efforts.
The
Ebola response mounted by the Trump administration in Uganda was “more
symbolic than substantive,” Konyndyk said. “They know there’s a
political vulnerability.”