Trump puts US on war footing to combat coronavirus
Describing himself as a “wartime president”, President Donald Trump has vowed the US will achieve “total victory” over the coronavirus.
He spoke as he revived a Korean War-era measure allowing the US to ramp up production of vital medical supplies.
Two lawmakers meanwhile became the first members of Congress to test positive for the infection.
The US has more than 9,300 cases of COVID-19 and has seen 150 deaths so far, according to estimates.
Globally, there are some 220,000 confirmed cases and over 8,800 deaths.
At a White House press conference, the president was asked by a reporter whether he considered the country to be on a war footing in terms of fighting the virus.
“It’s a war,” he said. “I view it as a war, in a sense, am a wartime president.”
Mr Trump has been holding daily briefings on the emergency this week after being accused of playing down the outbreak in its early stages.
He said: “We must sacrifice together, because we are all in this together, and we will come through together. It’s the invisible enemy. That’s always the toughest enemy.
“But we are going to defeat the invisible enemy. I think we are going to do it even faster than we thought, and it’ll be a complete victory. It’ll be a total victory.”
Mr Trump announced he was signing the 1950 Defense Production Act, which empowers the president to direct civilian businesses to help meet orders for products necessary for national security.
But he said later on Twitter that he would only invoke the measure “in a worst case scenario in the future”.
Mr Trump also described as an “absolute, total worst case scenario” a warning by his Treasury Secretary, Steve Mnuchin, that the pandemic could send US unemployment rocketing to 20 per cent.
The president said two US Navy hospitals ships would be pressed into service to help alleviate an expected shortage of sick beds.
The USNS Comfort is expected to be sent to New York Harbor, though defence officials said it is currently undergoing maintenance in Virginia.
The other vessel, USNS Mercy, is being prepared to deploy to a location on the West Coast.
During the press conference, Mr Trump again rejected suggestions that his use of the term “Chinese virus” to describe COVID-19 was racist. -BBC