calls
Ebola a national security priority and announces the US will establish a military command center in Liberia.
United States Department of Defense video, September 17, 2014 The
United States Africa Command, working through
United States Army Africa, has designated the
Army's response to the Ebola epidemic as Operation United Assistance. Up to 4,000
U.S. Army troops are planned as part of an aid mission there, starting September 2014. However, in late November 2014 this was reduced to 10 treatment centers with 50 beds each. By early January 2015, 8 out of 10 centers were completed. This type of hospital is called an
Ebola Treatment Unit or ETU for short. The military is also working with
USAID. Special isolation units for the
C-17 Globemaster aircraft are being worked on in late 2014 to support medical evacuation of personnel should they be infected. The current evacuation aircraft can only carry one patient at time, while the isolation unit is being designed to support up to 15. This included soldiers from an Engineering Battalion, to help construct buildings for the operation. Initial work included transporting supplies to Liberia, and scouting out sites to build the treatment centers. By December 2014, there were three thousand servicemembers deployed for the operation; by February 2015, the number of servicemembers dropped to around thirteen hundred. In early April 2015,
48th Chemical Biological Radiological Nuclear Brigade deployed to Liberia to oversee the draw down of the operation. ==Monrovia Medical Unit==