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Six-month mission ends as Ebola epidemic eases.
By LUIS MARTINEZ
• 5 min read
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WASHINGTON, D.C. The U.S. military is ending its Ebola relief mission in West Africa, with the last American troops scheduled to leave Liberia by April 30. The announcement comes as Ebola infection rates have been reduced dramatically in recent months.
In September, President Obama announced that American military personnel would be deployed to Liberia to help stem the Ebola epidemic in West Africa. The military personnel participating in Operation United Assistance did not treat Ebola patients, but helped build the infrastructure and facilities to treat them.
As the situation deteriorated, the U.S. Army’s Africa Command received a series of unprecedented orders
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By September 2014, Liberia appeared on the verge of collapsing before the ravages of the Ebola virus a horrifying disease infamous for escalating from flu-like symptoms to hemorrhaging that cause gruesome external and internal bleeding and vomiting, resulting in death in 50 to 90 percent of cases. President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf shut down public life in the nation, a measure that should now sound grimly familiar to a nation bracing itself to suppress COVID-19.
As the situation deteriorated, the U.S. Army’s Africa Command received a series of unprecedented orders. On September 12 it was asked to build a twenty-five bed hospital in the Liberian capital of Monrovia to help treat Liberian doctors and healthcare workers 150 of whom would die fighting the outbreak. Then three days later the mission, dubbed Operation United Assistance, was expand