Political Hotsheet
By

Leigh Ann Caldwell /

CBS News/ July 23, 2012, 9:01 AM

George W. Bush: America must lead on AIDS fight

Activists take part in the Keep the Promise Alive 2012 AIDS march and rally on the streets of Washington on July 22, 2012.

/ MANDEL NGAN/AFP/GettyImages)
(CBS News) President George W. Bush is praising the United States' commitment to treating AIDS overseas, particularly in Africa, and says the U.S. government needs to build on its successes.

In an op-ed article published in The Washington Post, Mr. Bush, in a rare injection into the public sphere, called the advancements in AIDS treatments "remarkable."

"It is proof of what many in Africa call the Lazarus effect: Communities once given up for dead have been brought back to life, and millions of men, women and children are alive to build their futures," he wrote.

The 43rd president attributed the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Malaria and Tuberculosis and its predecessor, the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR), for providing 6.2 million people in sub-Saharan Africa with antiviral drugs. PEPFAR, however, is not without its critics, including those who oppose the program's focus on abstinence to prevent the spread of HIV/AIDS.

"It would be a sad and terrible thing if the world chose this moment to lose its focus and will. Other countries and local governments in Africa can do more in providing resources and increasing funding -- as the new government of Zambia is doing. But to continue the momentum in the fight against AIDS, America must continue to lead," Mr. Bush wrote.

In his op-ed, the former president also called on the U.S. government to use the success of AIDS treatment to expand care for other diseases impacting Africans, including breast and cervical cancer, through his and Laura Bush's organization, Pink Ribbon Red Ribbon.

"It is heart-wrenching to save a woman from AIDS, only to watch her die from cervical cancer, which is more prevalent in women with HIV," he wrote, saying those are two of the leading causes of death in Africa.

Meanwhile, a gathering of more than 25,000 people is taking place this week in Washington, D.C., to take stock of accomplishments and challenges ahead in the battle against AIDS. It is the first time in its 19-year history that the International AIDS Conference is taking place in the U.S. The six-day event features speeches by former President Bill Clinton, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon and actress Sharon Stone.

© 2012 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
11 Comments Add a Comment
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fiddlestickawshucks says:
I don't care what Bush has to say about this.

We have been sending drugs to Africa to combat AIDS for decades.

What I want to know is, where is the $150 billion going to come from.?????

Hopefully, it will come from the corrupt drug companies who buy our Congressmen and Senators.

And, let's not forget the Prez.

I suspect; however; that it will come from American taxpayers who are being charged outrageous sums for life saving medications from this bunch of legal rip-off artists.

I don't know about you, but I think charging cancer patients as much as $4,000 per shot for desperately needed medications is immoral and should be illegal.
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55minus5 says:
Nothing makes sense to me ever any more. Does it make any for you, anyone?
Not the GWB anytime, please. What? Dubya? Hell no.
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Ulgnud says:
Horrible as it is, the transmission path of most AIDS infections is known. Sharing dirty drug needles and promiscuous behavior. I am not advocating or pushing morality on anyone but, simple logic says if you do not wish to contract the disease, then modification of behavior would likely help.
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nomorelibs says:
I love these stories. It really gets the lunatics fired up.
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55minus5 replies:
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How about you, though?
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expatriate2 says:
Why am I not touched by this sudden flow of compassion? Maybe because I didn't see it during the Iraq sanctions that led to 200 children dying each day. I didn't see it as nearly 120,000 of innocent civilians were slaughtered by his lies and deceptions. As some nations have declared, this man is a legitimate war criminal and to permit him to pretend to support a cause is yet another shame he brings upon America.
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Mike_in_USA says:
How about the U.S. must lead in the cancer fight?
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w_roos says:
Where's all that conservative talk about abstinence? I guess even **they** don't believe it works anymore. My, we've come a long way...
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derekclontz says:
As I understand it dating back to numerous published reports during his presidency, there is a seamy underbelly to George Bush's compassion - hundreds of millions in U.S. taxpayer cash going directly to drug companies that produce the medicines, a fact that should be made significant mention of in any story on this issue. I'm not saying don't spend the money. I'm saying that President Bush's "deep feeling" and at least partial rejection of the Christian principles (including abstinence among unmarried men and women) that led him to start, among other things, the war in Iraq, and his "rare injection in politics" have as a component a profit motive.
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bikeboat says:
Bush Jr. repeats this mantra over again, mainly because its the only thing he did that wasn't a terrible disaster.
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jambo223 says:
Nothing like a compassionate mass murdering war criminal...
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