The battle to defeat the coronavirus is becoming a struggle for supremacy that recalls the Cold War contest to dominate space.
Just as the Soviet Union jolted U.S. self-confidence by sending the first man into orbit in 1961, American pride would suffer a similar blow if China wins the race to develop a vaccine against the virus, Marc Champion writes.
President Donald Trump, who has repeatedly blamed China for the pandemic, is pursuing a research drive dubbed Operation Warp Speed. Chinese President Xi Jinping is overseeing an effort that is more advanced for now, while scoring geopolitical points with airlifts of medical aid to virus-stricken countries.
Russia has multiple vaccine projects underway, determined to avoid dependence on rival powers. The U.K., eager to bolster its "global Britain" image after Brexit, says Britons will be first in line if promising Oxford University research is successful.
The European Union has thrown its weight behind a more cooperative approach at a Group of 20 fundraiser for research, with its credibility on the line after admitting it was slow to come to Italy's aid.
The competition stakes could hardly be higher, even as China and the U.S. pledged to work to implement their bilateral trade deals. The nation that can immunize its workforce first will gain economic advantage and validation of its technological prowess and global standing.
If that is China, the geopolitical impact could be as dramatic as that first space shot.
— Anthony Halpin
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