Trump admin didn't want Ebola-exposed Americans, sent them to Berlin, Prague

Published: (May 20, 2026 at 05:58 PM EDT)
3 min read

Source: Ars Technica

White House response

White House spokesperson Kush Desai denied that the administration didn’t want to accept Stafford and attacked the Washington Post. “This is absolutely false and another reason why the Washington Post is no longer worth the paper it’s printed on,” Desai wrote in an email. He said the Trump administration’s top concern is ensuring the health and safety of citizens and praised the quality of the German hospital treating Stafford.

The United States has multiple centers and hospital systems with specialized facilities capable of providing safe, high‑quality care for Ebola patients.

In the press briefing on Wednesday afternoon, Pillai repeatedly dodged questions about the U.S. refusing to allow Ebola‑exposed Americans to return home for treatment and care. He also failed to explain how Germany and the Czech Republic—countries not known for expertise in dealing with Ebola—were chosen for caring for the Americans, or whether any other countries were asked to take them and refused.

When asked directly if the White House had made the decision to refuse Americans, Pillai responded:

“Right now, what I would say is that the plans for these individuals that have moved were made based on the conditions on the ground, the need to rapidly mobilize—as you know, this was a very rapid set of circumstances that unfolded over the weekend. And so, what I can tell you right now: this is what the situation was and this is how we responded as quickly as we could.”

Travel restrictions

In addition to sending Americans elsewhere for care and monitoring, the U.S. has introduced travel restrictions related to the Ebola outbreak.

  • Americans arriving from the Democratic Republic of Congo, Uganda, or South Sudan will undergo health screenings.
  • Non‑U.S. passport holders who have traveled in those countries in the past 21 days will be barred from entry.

In a statement Tuesday, Africa CDC responded to the restrictions, saying its “position is clear: generalised travel restrictions and border closures are not the solution to outbreaks. Such measures can create fear, damage economies, discourage transparency, complicate humanitarian and health operations, and divert movement toward informal and unmonitored routes—potentially increasing public health risks rather than reducing them.”

Jean Kaseya, Africa’s CDC director general, added: “The fastest path to protecting all countries in the world is to aggressively support outbreak control at the source. Global health security cannot be achieved through borders alone. It is achieved through partnership, trust, science, and rapid investment in preparedness and response capacity.”

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