Making the Pandemic Worse – Kathy Kelly

March 25, 2020

During the United States’ 1991 “Desert Storm” war against Iraq, I was part of the Gulf Peace Team—at first, living in a “peace camp” set up near the Iraq-Saudi border. We found an abandoned typewriter, attached a lit candle so that we could see (the United States had destroyed Iraq’s electrical stations, and most of the hotel rooms were pitch black), and, in lieu of a typewriter ribbon, placed a sheet of red carbon paper over our stationery.

Iraqi authorities, lacking a functioning typewriter of their own, asked us to type their letter to Javier Pérez de Cuéllar, the secretary-general of the United Nations, imploring him to prevent the United States from bombing a road between Iraq and Jordan, the only way out for refugees and the only way in for humanitarian relief.

Now, in 2020, Iraqis still suffering from impoverishment, displacement, and war earnestly want the United States to practice  “physical distance” and leave their country.

Meanwhile, U.S. sanctions against Iran, which the Trump Administration has cruelly strengthened, continue to collectively punish extremely vulnerable people. The United States’ current “maximum pressure” policy severely undermines Iranian efforts to cope with the ravages of COVID-19, causing hardship and tragedy while contributing to the global spread of the disease.


On March 12, Iran’s foreign minister, Mohammad Javad Zarif, urged member states of the United Nations to end the United States’ unconscionable and lethal economic warfare. Addressing U.N. Secretary- General António Guterres, Javad Zarif’s letter detailed how U.S. economic sanctions prevent Iranians from importing necessary medicine and medical equipment.

While the world experiences sweeping transformation and bold new questions, United States foreign policy has stubbornly “stayed the course,” continuing the divisive, corrosive policies of a permanent warfare state. The recent decision to tighten economic sanctions against Iran shows a U.S. foreign policy staunchly predicated on threat and force.

Ironically, the Trump Administration’s policy of “maximum pressure” against Iran actually helps spread “the invisible enemy”—COVID-19—as economic sanctions undermine Iran’s capacity to tackle the new coronavirus.

On March 19, Iran’s health ministry said the coronavirus was killing one Iranian every ten minutes and infecting fifty more people each hour. On the same day, U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo blacklisted twelve international companies for doing business with Iran’s petrochemical sector.  

Efforts by the Iranian government to address the crisis have included releasing 85,000 nonviolent prisoners from overcrowded prisons. Yet the Iranian government didn’t impose radical restrictions that would have prevented hundreds of thousands of people from traveling and congregating to celebrate Nowruz, the Persian New Year on March 20.

Why has the Iranian government, in spite of a rising death toll, been reluctant to impose compulsory quarantines? The Guardian newspaper suggests the government is so strapped  financially that it can’t afford to make welfare payments to low-income workers, and it must continue to keep them employed. The United States bears direct responsibility for enforcing Iran’s economic decline.

Oil sales constitute 70 percent of Iran’s revenues. Since May 2018, the United States has strong-armed Europe, South Korea, India, Japan, and other countries into refraining from purchasing Iranian oil. Iran’s oil sales tumbled from 2.5 million barrels per day in 2017 to a few hundred thousand in recent months. By interfering with Iran’s shipping, insurance, financial, and banking systems, the United States has severely restricted Iran’s capacity to obtain desperately needed medicines and supplies.

Regionally, Iran is surrounded by dozens of U.S. military bases scattered across countries including Afghanistan, Kuwait, Iraq, Turkey, and the United Arab Emirates. Yet Iran poses no direct threat to the United States, with its vastly superior weapons arsenal and unrivaled military superiority.

The United States accuses Iran of meddling in the affairs of other countries, supplying weapons and training to Yemen’s Houthi rebels battling against Saudi Arabia, and bolstering Hezbollah and Hamas in their fight against Israel. But the United States also meddles, as evidenced by the invasion and occupation of neighboring Iraq and Afghanistan, and its interventions in Libya and Syria.


Now, Iran’s devastated economy and worsening coronavirus outbreak is driving migrants and refugees back to Afghanistan at dramatically increased rates. In a two-week period in March alone, more than 50,000 Afghans returned from Iran, increasing the likelihood that cases of COVID-19 will surge in Afghanistan. Decades of war, including the U.S. invasion and occupation since October 2001, have decimated Afghanistan’s health care and food distribution systems.

Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif, in his letter to U.N. Secretary-General Guterres, accused the United States of crimes against humanity and demanded that the U.S. government “abandon its malign and fruitless approach against Iran.”

Are we now living in a watershed time? A new, unstoppable, deadly virus ignores all borders, including those the United States tries to reinforce or redraw. The U.S. military-industrial complex, with its massive arsenals and cruel capacity for siege, is no longer relevant to “security” needs.

Why should the United States, at this crucial juncture, approach other countries with threats and seek to preserve global inequities? Such arrogance doesn’t ensure security for even the U.S. military. If the United States further isolates and batters Iran, conditions will worsen in Afghanistan, and U.S. troops stationed there will ultimately be at risk. The simple observation, “We are all part of one another,” becomes acutely evident.

It’s perhaps helpful to revisit guidance from those who faced wars and pandemics in the past. The influenza pandemic that ravaged the world beginning in 1918 killed an estimated fifty million people worldwide, including 675,000 in the United States alone.

Thousands of nurses were on the “front lines,” delivering health care. Among them were black nurses who not only risked their lives to practice works of mercy but also fought discrimination and racism in their determination to serve. These brave women arduously paved the way for the first eighteen black nurses to serve in the Army Nurse Corps, and they provided “a small turning point in the continuing movement for health equity.”

It also may be helpful to learn from health care professionals who are right now caring for people in the world’s poorest places.


Writing in mid-March, from a rural village in Tamil Nadu, India, three doctors explained how “public health advisories that have been released in the past few weeks” were geared toward urban residents in the upper and middle classes. They described their encounter with a patient who showed symptoms of COVID-19 infection and advised that she and her daughter home isolate. But the daughter responded that this advice wasn’t practical.

“Our house is a little hut, and all four of us live in the same room,” she said. “We have enough room just to lie down and sleep. Keeping a one-meter distance is impossible. Three of us are women, and it is not safe for women to sleep outside the house. There is also the threat of scorpions and snakes outside.”

When advised to at least keep her mother home until she was well, the daughter explained that “rain or shine, sick or healthy, my mother must go out to graze the goats.”

“At the end of this little conversation,” noted the doctors, “we understood how impractical social distancing is, for a vast majority of the poor population with whom we work.”

In a recent series of tweets, Jonathan Whittall, director of the analysis department for Médecins Sans Frontières (Doctors Without Borders), posed some agonizing questions:

How are you supposed to wash your hands regularly if you have no running water or soap? How are you supposed to implement “social distancing” if you live in a slum or a refugee or containment camp? How are you supposed to stay home if your work pays by the hour and requires you to show up? How are you supposed to stop crossing borders if you are fleeing from war? How are you supposed to get tested for #COVID-19 if the health system is privatized and you can’t afford it? How are those with pre-existing health conditions supposed to take extra precautions when they already can’t even access the treatment they need?

 As COVID-19 continues to spread, many people worldwide are evaluating the glaring, deadly inequalities in our societies. One way to improve survival is to insist that the United States lift sanctions against Iran and instead support acts of practical care. We must jointly confront the coronavirus while constructing a humane future for the world, without wasting time or resources on the continuation of brutal wars.

Addressing UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres, Javad Zarif detailed how U.S. economic sanctions prevent Iranians from importing necessary medicine and medical equipment.

For over two years, while the U.S. bullied other countries to refrain from purchasing Iranian oil, Iranians have coped with crippling economic decline.

The devastated economy and worsening coronavirus outbreak now drive migrants and refugees, who number in the millions, back to Afghanistan at dramatically increased rates.

In the past two weeks alone, more than 50,000 Afghans returned from Iran, increasing the likelihood that cases of coronavirus will surge in Afghanistan. Decades of war, including U.S. invasion and occupation, have decimated Afghanistan’s health care and food distribution systems.

Mohammad Javad Zarif asks the UN to prevent the use of hunger and disease as a weapon of war. His letter demonstrates the  wreckage caused by many decades of United States imperialism and suggests revolutionary steps toward dismantling the United States war machine.

During the United States’ 1991 “Desert Storm” war against Iraq, I was part of the Gulf Peace Team, – at first, living at in a “peace camp” set up near the Iraq-Saudi border and later, following our removal by Iraqi troops, in a Baghdad hotel which formerly housed many journalists. Finding an abandoned typewriter, we melted a candle onto its rim, (the U.S. had destroyed Iraq’s electrical stations, and most of the hotel rooms were pitch black). We compensated for an absent typewriter ribbon by placing a sheet of red carbon paper over our stationery. When Iraqi authorities realized we managed to type our document, they asked if we would type their letter to the Secretary General of the UN. (Iraq was so beleaguered even cabinet level officials lacked typewriter ribbons.) The letter to Javier Perez de Cuellar implored the UN to prevent the U.S. from bombing a road between Iraq and Jordan, the only way out for refugees and the only way in for humanitarian relief. Devastated by bombing and already bereft of supplies, Iraq was, in 1991, only one year into a deadly sanctions regime that lasted for thirteen years before the U.S. began its full-scale invasion and occupation in 2003. Now, in 2020, Iraqis still suffering from impoverishment, displacement and war earnestly want the U.S. to practice self-distancing and leave their country.

Are we now living in a watershed time? An unstoppable, deadly virus ignores any borders the U.S. tries to reinforce or redraw. The United States military-industrial complex, with its massive arsenals and cruel capacity for siege, isn’t relevant to “security” needs. Why should the U.S., at this crucial juncture, approach other countries with threat and force and presume a right to preserve global inequities? Such arrogance doesn’t even ensure security for the United States military. If the U.S. further isolates and batters Iran, conditions will worsen in Afghanistan and United States troops stationed there will ultimately be at risk. The simple observation, “We are all part of one another,” becomes acutely evident.

It’s helpful to think of guidance from past leaders who faced wars and pandemics. The Spanish flu pandemic in 1918-19, coupled with the atrocities of World War I,  killed 50 million worldwide, 675,000 in the U.S. Thousands of female nurses were on the “front lines,” delivering health care. Among them were black nurses who not only risked their lives to practice the works of mercy but also fought discrimination and racism in their determination to serve. These brave women arduously paved a way for the first 18 black nurses to serve in the Army Nurse Corps and they provided “a small turning point in the continuing movement for health equity.”

In the spring of 1919, Jane Addams and Alice Hamilton witnessed the effects of sanctions against Germany imposed by Allied forces after World War I. They observed “critical shortages of food, soap and medical supplies” and wrote indignantly about how children were being punished with starvation for “the sins of statesmen.”

Starvation continued even after the blockade was finally lifted, that summer, with the signing of the Treaty of Versailles. Hamilton and Addams reported how the flu epidemic, exacerbated in its spread by starvation and post-war devastation, in turn disrupted the food supply. The two women argued a policy of sensible food distribution was necessary for both  humanitarian and strategic reasons. “What was to be gained by starving more children?” bewildered German parents asked them.

Jonathan Whitall directs Humanitarian Analysis for Médecins Sans Frontières / Doctors without Borders. His most recent analysis poses agonizing questions:

How are you supposed to wash your hands regularly if you have no running water or soap? How are you supposed to implement ‘social distancing’ if you live in a slum or a refugee or containment camp? How are you supposed to stay at home if your work pays by the hour and requires you to show up? How are you supposed to stop crossing borders if you are fleeing from war? How are you supposed to get tested for #COVID19 if the health system is privatized and you can’t afford it? How are those with pre-existing health conditions supposed to take extra precautions when they already can’t even access the treatment they need?

I expect many people worldwide, during the spread of COVID – 19,  are thinking hard about the glaring, deadly inequalities in our societies, wonder how best to extend proverbial hands of friendship to people in need while urged to accept isolation and social distancing. One way to help others survive is to insist the United States lift sanctions against Iran and instead support acts of practical care. Jointly confront the coronavirus while constructing a humane future for the world without wasting  time or resources on the continuation of brutal wars.

Kathy Kelly (kathy@vcnv.org) co-coordinates Voices for Creative Nonviolence (www.vcnv.org)

Photo: Protester’s sign declares sanctions “A Silent War” – credit, Campaign for Peace and Democracy, 2013

This article also appeared on the website of magazine The Progressive.