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U.S. Ebola fighters head to Africa, but will the military and civilian effort be enough?
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WASHINGTON POST Oct. 26, 2014
By Joel Achenbach and Lena H. Sun
Hundreds of Americans have flown to Liberia in the past few days. Thousands more are on the way.
American troops setting up field hospital in Liberia --NYTimes
This Ebola corps is a collection of doctors, nurses, scientists, soldiers, aviators, technicians, mechanics and engineers. Many are volunteers with nonprofit organizations or the government, including uniformed doctors and nurses from the little-known U.S. Public Health Service. Most are military personnel, snapping a salute when are assigned to their mission — “Operation United Assistance.” It does not qualify for combat pay, only hardship-duty incentive pay, which is about $5 a day — before taxes....
The U.S. military is deploying primarily to Liberia, though the U.S. civilian operations include Guinea, Sierra Leone and other nations in West Africa. President Obama announced Sept. 16 that the military would provide support to the civilian-run effort that had failed to keep the epidemic from growing exponentially. The question now is whether this more muscular response is too little too late.
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