The Disease of Weapon That Moves While the World Stands Still
There is something deeply predictable about global crises. If it doesn’t fit neatly into a political agenda or an economic strategy, it gets ignored. And right now, that is exactly what’s happening with Clade 1b—a disease rapidly spreading across eastern Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) and Burundi while the world is too distracted to care.
Frank Aarestrup, one of the few experts actually paying attention, gives a measured warning:
“At present, we are seeing uncontrolled transmission of Clade 1b in eastern DRC and Burundi, but to a lesser extent in other parts of East Africa. While there is some international spread, we do not yet expect a large outbreak outside the epicenter in East Africa.”
Translation? It’s bad, but not bad enough for rich nations to react.
Of course, this is always how it starts. First, a crisis is “contained.” Then, when it predictably isn’t, we act surprised. The only thing that spreads faster than disease is denial.
No Borders, No Barriers—Only Excuses
There’s a universal truth about viruses: they don’t care about maps. Clade 1b is already creeping into neighboring countries, and without real intervention, it will keep going.
So, what’s the plan? Aarestrup suggests two things:
- Local Action – More vaccines, public awareness campaigns, and real enforcement of preventive measures. Not just printing posters and pretending that’s enough.
- Global Response – Travel advisories, serious border monitoring, and—brace yourself—frank conversations about high-risk behaviors, particularly among sex workers.
“It is crucial to avoid close contact, particularly sexual contact, in high-risk areas,” warns Aarestrup.
But here’s the problem—prevention isn’t profitable. War is.
Europe’s Priorities: Guns First, Health Later
While Africa faces a growing epidemic, Europe is gearing up for something else entirely: more weapons.
On March 6, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen will announce a plan to “re-arm” Europe. NATO’s Mark Rutte has already called recent meetings “very good” (which is diplomatic code for “we’ve decided to spend more on the military”). Meanwhile, Ukraine’s Volodymyr Zelenskyy seems ready to move past his Oval Office confrontation with Washington, though what that actually means is anyone’s guess.
One thing is certain: there will always be money for war. But when it comes to stopping a deadly disease in its early stages? Suddenly, there are “budget constraints.”
A ‘Coalition of the Willing’—But Not for Health
British Prime Minister Keir Starmer is pushing for a “Coalition of the Willing” to enforce a peace deal in Ukraine—whenever that happens. Sounds noble. But where’s the coalition for stopping Clade 1b?
Where’s the global alliance ensuring vaccines and medical aid get where they’re needed? Where’s the emergency fund for African health infrastructure? Where’s the urgent action plan to stop the next pandemic before it starts?
Nowhere. Because while governments love talking about “security,” they rarely mean health security—at least not until it’s their own people at risk.
The Bottom Line
Clade 1b is spreading. It won’t stop on its own. While billions are funneled into defense, a preventable crisis is unfolding right in front of us. The choice is simple: act now, or wait until it spirals out of control.
But if history is anything to go by, we already know how this ends.