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Policy & Politics Clark Announces AIDS Funding Plan While in Florida; Calls for $30B Over Five Years, Criticizes Bush AIDS PolicyDecember 2, 2003 Retired Army Gen. Wesley Clark on Monday in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., in recognition of World AIDS Day recommended that the United States double its spending on global AIDS and other diseases to $30 billion over five years, the Fort Lauderdale Sun-Sentinel reports (Nevins, Fort Lauderdale Sun-Sentinel, 12/2). Clark's four-part strategy, which he is calling his "Global AIDS Security Policy," would double the U.S. commitment to fighting AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria and allocate a large majority of the funding to multilateral approaches such as the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria. Clark's plan would offer financial incentives for pharmaceutical companies working on vaccines for AIDS and other infectious diseases, according to a Clark fact sheet. The five-year plan would be partially subsidized by rescinding recent tax cuts, Clark aides said. The plan would also overturn the so-called "global gag rule." The policy, which is also known as the Mexico City policy, bars U.S. money from international groups that support abortion through direct services, counseling or lobbying activities (Kaiser Daily HIV/AIDS Report, 12/1). Clark said that fighting HIV/AIDS worldwide is "not just a moral issue," adding, "It's a national security issue." Clark added that the United States must respond to the HIV/AIDS crisis to retain gains made in developing countries and prevent countries highly affected by the epidemic from becoming "terrorist breeding grounds," the Sun-Sentinel reports. Clark said, "By destroying governments and hollowing out societies, this pandemic provides the perfect conditions for terrorist movements that thrive in areas of chaos and misery." Criticism of Bush Plan Other Democratic Presidential Candidates Clark's promise to spend $30 billion over five years on AIDS, TB and malaria represents a "truly bold program," Rev. Jesse Jackson writes in a syndicated column in the Chicago Sun-Times. Jackson says that Bush's initiative has "delayed action" on HIV/AIDS by not working with multilateral programs that have a "proven track record," such as the Global Fund. According to Jackson, Clark would not "spurn" the Global Fund or the World Health Organization in his AIDS initiative, which is the "centerpiece" of what he calls his "preventive engagement policy" to make the United States "a source of hope in the world," Jackson says. "Perhaps it takes a general, knowing the scope and the limits of our military strength, to deal aggressively with a disease of mass destruction," Jackson concludes (Jackson, Chicago Sun-Times, 12/2). Back to other news for December 2, 2003
This article was provided by Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. It is a part of the publication Kaiser Daily HIV/AIDS Report.
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