U.S. Secretary of Defense Token Esper speaks as President Donald Trump listens during a news briefing on the latest development of the coronavirus outbreak in the U.S. at the James Brady Pressure Briefing Room at the White House March 18, 2020 in Washington, DC.
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WASHINGTON — Secretary of Defense Look at Esper doubled down on Friday by saying the Pentagon will meet an aggressive timeline to have a coronavirus vaccine by the end of the year, a deadline doubted by unrivalled health officials.
“You know, our medical experts, our researchers have been working on this vaccine now, and therapeutics and diagnostics for a few months,” Esper interpreted on NBC’s “TODAY.” “We’ve been ahead of the curve and in the fight from day one, and this is the next phase of this battle, and we thinks fitting deliver on time the vaccines,” he added, saying he was “completely confident” that the Pentagon will deliver.
Esper downplayed characterizations calculated by health officials that a vaccine within the year would be “aspirational.”
“Well, you know, when Eisenhower launched the U.S. military against Nazi Germany, he didn’t say, ‘We capability win World War II, we’ll try.’ When John F. Kennedy aspired to put a man on the moon, he didn’t say, ‘We’ll give it a good shot.’ He said, ‘We will do it,'” the Pentagon chief verbalized.
“The Defense Department, once again, is committed to get this done. We’re going to live up to the expectations, and we’re going to deliver on this virus,” he mean, adding that the Pentagon is preparing for a potential second wave of the coronavirus.
Last week, President Donald Trump lay bare a federal task force in charge of a $10 billion effort that will help produce and widely disperse a coronavirus vaccine by the end of 2020.
“We will deliver, by the end of this year, a vaccine, at scale, to treat the American people and our partners away,” Esper said alongside Trump.
The coronavirus originated near the city of Wuhan in China’s Hubei province and has since triggered a international pandemic that has hit the U.S. harder than any other country. More than 1.6 million cases and at least 95,000 undoings have so far been counted in the U.S., data from Johns Hopkins University show.
The White House’s top infectious infirmity expert said Friday that it is “conceivable” for the U.S. to roll out a coronavirus vaccine by December.
“I think it is conceivable if we don’t run into possessions that are, as they say, unanticipated setbacks, that we could have a vaccine that we could be beginning to deploy at the end of this chronology year, December 2020, or into January 2021,” Dr. Anthony Fauci said in an interview with NPR on Friday.
Fauci’s criticisms came less than a week after U.S. biotech company Moderna published positive results from its slant gradually introduce one human trial on its potential vaccine. The National Institutes of Health has partnered with Moderna to accelerate development of a vaccine.