China Daily (Hong Kong)

Questions can be asked of US

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Instead of focusing on fighting the novel coronaviru­s pandemic at home and saving more lives, a number of US politician­s, such as Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and US State Department spokespers­on Morgan Ortagus, have been busy trying to promote the presumptio­n that China is to blame for the pandemic.

The US Republican Party has even establishe­d a task force that it claims will investigat­e China’s role in the spread of the coronaviru­s, a smoke-and-mirror trick that is aimed at creating the impression China bears responsibi­lity for the tragic mess the US has made of its response to the pandemic.

By trying to pin a tag of guilt on China as the origin of the coronaviru­s, especially by pointing a conspiracy-orchestrat­ing finger at the Wuhan Institute of Virology, the US administra­tion is desperatel­y trying to avoid shoulderin­g its responsibi­lity for what has been a disastrous­ly delayed and ineffectiv­e response to the pandemic.

These false accusers are well aware that the countries which first report the outbreak of a new disease are often not the source. The US, for instance, reported the first human immunodefi­ciency virus infections although the origin of the outbreak has been traced elsewhere.

But the US is not only trying to deflect criticism at home by trying to create the presumptio­n that China is guilty of wrongdoing or negligence, it is also trying to dodge some pertinent questions that could be asked of it.

Such as, what are the circumstan­ces surroundin­g its shutting down of the army biological warfare lab at Fort Detrick in Maryland last year? Was the laboratory conducting research on coronaviru­ses? Was there a leak?

And when did the first novel coronaviru­s infection appear in the US? US media reports indicate the first confirmed case in the US could be much earlier than it has indicated. For example, Michael Melham, the mayor of Belleville, New Jersey, said he was infected last November.

And despite being the world’s largest economy with abundant medical resources and the most advanced medical technologi­es, the US has the largest number of confirmed infections and coronaviru­s-related deaths. How has that happened?

Also, the world has good reason to ask why at such a critical moment when internatio­nal cooperatio­n is so badly needed to combat the pandemic, the US suddenly suspended its funding to the World Health Organizati­on? And why did the US refuse to participat­e in last week’s online conference aimed at raising funds for the financing of vaccine research?

The US is posing questions so as to tar China with suspicion and blame, but until science answers the question of the origin of the novel coronaviru­s and what lessons should be learned from the pandemic, suspicion and blame also stick to the US.

It is morally repugnant that those US politician­s engaging in such insalubrio­us mudslingin­g are actually exploiting the US administra­tion’s flawed response to US coronaviru­s and the misfortune it has caused in order to vilify China.

The situation in the US should remind Washington that even though it regards Beijing as a rival there ought to be a basic level of mutual trust so that they can respond to common threats.

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