There are about 300 NG that have been activated before this afternoon but it's unclear how many will respond directly in a LE capacity at Capitol vs security, checkpoints, etc
From people I spoke with the NG request came right after people got onto the Capitol steps and into the building
To be CLEAR, the Army hasn't yet made clear to the NG exactly what the new change of mission would be re: request or what will happen next.
2:51 p.m. NEW statement from office Sec of the Army we got: "We're in close contact with local and fed law enforcement agencies to review potential additional support requirements from the NG."
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I've covered wars oversees. I lived in Cairo during the revolution and the aftermath. Watching what happened today at the Capitol was eerily familiar to scenes I've seen take place across the world. I want to lay out a very rough timeline here from my reporting today. Thread.
Reflecting back on the last several hours it's remarkable how long it took to get the situation even somewhat under control at the Capitol
As the day started there were Capitol police on site. There were also about 300 or so NG deployed in the area to help with “security” —basically at checkpoints/manning the area.
There have been concerns for weeks about the lack of clear comms between states and the admin about vaccine distribution. State officials feared there would be shortages and that they wouldn’t get what they were promised in terms of doses.
We’ve been speaking to officials across the country who as of Monday still had no idea when they were getting their shipments
Some states were so concerned about this happening that they spelled it out in black and white in the vaccine distribution plans they submitted to the CDC.
NEW: I've spent the past few days in hospitals in Providence to report on the dire COVID situation. The recent surge hasn’t just overwhelmed RI, it’s completely overrun it.
The vaccine arrived this week and docs didn't have time to celebrate
Special thanks to all the healthcare workers who spent time with me. S/o to @meganranney and the home healthcare nurses who don't have enough PPE to take care of patients when they return back to their families
The situation in Providence is overwhelming. The day the vaccine arrived, RI reported 46 new deaths and 3,253 new cases, meaning that one out of every 325 people reported being infected.
I spent a lot of time speaking with nurses and docs about what a spike in new cases would mean for their hospitals. The anxiety is especially high in Wisconsin. One nurse I spoke to said her hospital is at capacity and that she's seen an influx of pediatric cases in recent weeks:
This one nurse said she's treated more than a dozen babies under 60 days as well as a slew of children with diabetes, including one 13 year old who remains intubated.
This nurse said one of the biggest issues she has to deal with is families coming into the ER convinced that COVID-19 is not real or that it doesn't impact children.
The CDC is recommending people do not travel for Thanksgiving this year.
Guidelines will be published later today
The CDC describes these guidelines as "strong recommendations" but not mandates. Points to increasing hospitalizations and cases as reason for caution.
Spoke to Dr. Fauci for a while tonight. Here's a rundown of where we're at with the vaccine:
1. "This is a new platform and there was always skepticism about using a new platform. Now we know it was successful"
Fauci said MODERNA vaccine is also likely going to be successful
2. Fauci said that the Pfizer vaccine targeted the "spike protein" and so the fact that Pfizer vaccine is successful bodes well for other companies.
"It's predictive of being even more good news with the other vaccines."
3. "Thus far — from what I hear the supply chain process is in place," Fauci said.
He said the CDC, in consultation with an advisory committee, "is the one that decides the priority of the distribution and it is all being worked out now"