Guerrilla warfare usually refers to the strategy of fighting
by groups of irregular troops within areas occupied by the enemy, using tactics
such as surprise, ambush, and deception (Smith 1). A small group of commandos
will remain in hiding until the correct moment to raid the enemy, performing a
quick strike, and then retreating to the underbrush where they are concealed
from view. This action is repeated as long as it is necessary, until a significant
amount of damage has been done. Guerrilla warfare has been a very successful
attack design for a wide array of people and organisms, including a virus that
has recently become one of the most feared diseases among the United States
population. The Ebola virus’ has utilized this tactic, which is the main reason
it has been so efficient in human lethality and individual survival.
Ebola is a zoonotic pathogen; it is able to cross from an
animal host hideaway into a human, spreading uncontrollably at times and
leading to death. This type of virus enables Ebola to have a very complicated
and problematic advantage: the ability to hide. It is not hiding consciously of
course, but in a place it is able to survive and reproduce. This area of hiding
is primarily an organism, called a reservoir host, which carries the pathogen
but has little to no suffering or illness. Ebola is able to lurk in an
ecosystem where there is much diversity and the environment remains relatively
undisturbed. But once an ecological disturbance has occurred, Ebola emerges
from depths of the jungle. It makes a quick strike, infecting then killing
numerous people and then disappearing again into the unknown. This happens continuously,
using a form of guerrilla warfare, teeming with surprise attacks to take human
and animal lives before retreating to its reservoir host.
Because of Ebola’s method of irregular and ambush
infections, it has proven difficult to study the virus. So far no proven
treatment or cure has been identified, which has created a very high mortality
rate for the disease. Ebola is transmitted through bodily fluids, so infection
can spread rapidly as a sudden surge of sickness; people will not know
something is contaminated until it is too late. As of now, the identity of
Ebola’s reservoir host remains unknown, although some recent evidence has
pointed to a type of fruit bat located in the caves of West Africa. As long as
scientists cannot pinpoint the exact host, Ebola will continue to inflict its
terror on humans in West Africa and the rest of the world.
Currently there are at least five known strains of the
ebolavirus. Four are scattered across sub-Saharan Africa and one seems to be
endemic to the Philippines and has traveled to the United States on occasion.
These different forms have various symptoms, and each new virus discovered
seems to be more lethal, as it increases its death rate progressively. This
means that the Ebola has been evolving and continues to evolve, making genetic
changes that favors its survival and increases its destructiveness. This fact
creates an eerie sense that Ebola is not gone for good; its reappearance is
inevitable. It is scary to think that the virus is becoming worse, and
eventually an outbreak will occur where it spreads even faster and causes more
casualties. Maybe the next occasion Ebola happens to emerge from its quiet
hideaway, it will not be contained in just Africa and will spread to other countries
more than it has previously. With no known remedy, this could lead to the worst
outbreak the world has seen in years.
References:
Quammen, David, and David Quammen. Ebola: The Natural and Human History
of a Deadly Virus. N.p.: n.p.,
n.d. Print
Smith, Peter. "Guerrilla Warfare." TheFreeDictionary.com.
N.p., n.d. Web. 13 Mar. 2016.
I liked your connection of guerrilla warfare to ebola. I enjoyed reading the book for class and your article offered a new perspective on the topic. I want to make a trip to Africa to help with victims of ebola, malaria, or AIDS depending on the immediate need in the locations I visit.
ReplyDeleteIt is so interesting to me that Ebola hides so we cannot study it. It definitely makes it difficult to create a vaccine or antibiotic for Ebola if we cannot study the virus itself. It's also incredible that there are five strains that all are comparative but differ which will make it much harder to fight.
ReplyDeleteEbola is probably the most feared infection in the world. Books and movies have been made about its rapid spread and its rapid cause of death. It does attack humankind and dies off quickly with its host. This in and of itself does not help the virus. Its normal host allows it to hide and multiply. We need to find out what causes it to transfer its infection to mankind to prevent an epidemic
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