Ambassador Zero: A Virus’s Toll on U.S. Diplomats at Residence and Overseas

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Ambassador Zero: A Virus’s Toll on U.S. Diplomats at Residence and Overseas

WASHINGTON — The signs have been extra annoying than alarming: A dry cough, achiness after which sniffles developed a number of days after Andrew Y


WASHINGTON — The signs have been extra annoying than alarming: A dry cough, achiness after which sniffles developed a number of days after Andrew Younger, the American ambassador to Burkina Faso, met with authorities officers and support organizations to debate the best way to shield the West African nation from the coronavirus.

Per week later, Mr. Younger was sealed in an isolation chamber and loaded into an evacuation flight out of the capital, Ouagadougou, as the primary United States ambassador to study he had the virus.

He’s unlikely to be the final. Already, 154 State Division workers worldwide have examined constructive for the virus and greater than 3,000 are symptomatic and in self-isolation, the overwhelming majority of them serving in posts abroad.

The pursuit of diplomacy is generally idealistic, if normally faceless and sometimes thankless. However exterior battle zones, it’s not often lethal. Even essentially the most placid assignments include safety guards and different protecting measures.

The coronavirus has modified that.

Diplomats, whose very jobs are to work together with foreigners and to signify 20 million People who dwell overseas, have been extremely susceptible to the pandemic because it swept world wide and into nations which were sluggish to acknowledge its menace, many whose medical services are lower than sufficient to begin.

Three non-American State Division workers have died from the coronavirus thus far, together with one from Indonesia and one other from the Democratic Republic of Congo. The State Division didn’t disclose on Friday the place the third individual was from, besides to say that she or he was not an American citizen. All three have been employed on the embassies of their respective residence nations.

On March 20, the day earlier than Mr. Younger examined constructive, President Trump described the State Department as the “Deep State Department” — a jab at what he sees as a disloyal diplomatic corps. He delivered it during a coronavirus briefing as he stood next to Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, who minutes later said of the president, “I know how much he values the people that work on my team.”

It was left to Representative Eliot L. Engel, the chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, to defend the State Department staff. “These men and women aren’t a ‘deep state,’” Mr. Engel, Democrat of New York, said later. “They’re our leading edge in working to protect Americans in the farthest corners of the world.”

Those include places that have scant health care to diagnose and treat the virus. Last week, there were only 43 kits available in Burkina Faso to test for coronavirus infection. The country currently has one of the highest numbers of infections in Africa — as of Friday, there were at least 288 confirmed cases and 16 deaths.

Mr. Young was evacuated on March 25 on a flight that was chartered by the State Department to bring him and 120 healthy passengers home from Burkina Faso and Liberia. As soon as the plane landed at Dulles International Airport in the Virginia suburbs of Washington after a 29-hour journey, he was suited up in full biohazard gear and whisked off to a hospital for several days of treatment.

He considers himself lucky. And he wants to return to Burkina Faso as soon as the State Department will let him.

There are 171 U.S. embassies and 87 consulates around the world; all but two remain open. Those two — consulates in Vladivostok, Russia, and Wuhan, China, where the coronavirus originated — were shuttered this year because of the outbreak.

But 12 other American diplomatic missions are not fully staffed and many officials worldwide have returned to the United States as the pandemic spread. About two-thirds of the diplomats and contractors posted to the United States Embassy in Beijing and Consulates elsewhere in China, for example, have left. Several hundred remain.

Tests for the virus also have been unavailable in some posts to diplomats who worry they could be exposed — putting not just themselves, but also those around them in danger.

“People accept a significant level of risk in this career,” said Eric Rubin, a former ambassador to Bulgaria who is now the president of the union that represents career diplomats. But, he said, there is a need for clear, consistent guidance and the department largely has dealt with the coronavirus “bureau by bureau and post by post.”

None of the U.S. diplomats among the roughly 70 American and Chinese employees at the U.S. Consulate in Wuhan has tested positive for the virus, said Jamie Fouss, the consul general who led its emergency closing on Jan. 28.

A month earlier, diplomats there had become aware of a new, fast-moving virus in Wuhan that attacked the respiratory system, and alerted supervisors at the American Embassy in Beijing in late December. Mr. Fouss said he woke up one morning in mid-January to learn that the airport and some roads in Wuhan were closing, with more to follow in the coming days.

Emergency food supplies were checked; evacuation routes were debated.

Even after the State Department secured a flight to bring home the consulate’s American staff, diplomats had to negotiate with China’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs to reopen roads for the drive to the airport. The Chinese government also prohibited any people with Chinese passports from leaving, Mr. Fouss said.

Temperatures were taken before boarding and several times during the long flight home, which landed on Jan. 29 at March Air Reserve Base in Riverside, Calif. The plane was greeted by a C.D.C. officer, who informed all passengers that they would be held there under a 14-day federal quarantine — the first imposed in the United States since the 1960s.

“His hands are shaking, and you can tell he’s very nervous, because he’s expecting this huge uproar from us,” Mr. Fouss said. “And one of my officers said, ‘Well, will you set it up so we can watch the Super Bowl?’ And he said, ‘Yes, I think we can do that.’ And everybody laughed and cheered.”



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