Albuquerque Journal

DHS: China hid severity of outbreak

Leaders’ actions gained time to hoard supplies, documents say

- BY WILL WEISSERT ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON — U.S. officials believe China covered up the extent of the coronaviru­s outbreak — and how contagious the disease is — to stock up on medical supplies needed to respond to it, intelligen­ce documents show.

Chinese leaders “intentiona­lly concealed the severity” of the pandemic from the world in early January, accord

ing to a four-page Department of Homeland Security intelligen­ce report dated May 1 and obtained by The Associated Press. The revelation comes as the Trump administra­tion has intensifie­d its criticism of China, with Secretary of State Mike Pompeo saying Sunday that the country was responsibl­e for the spread of disease and must be held accountabl­e.

The sharper rhetoric coincides with administra­tion critics saying the government’s response to the virus was slow and inadequate. President Donald Trump’s political opponents have accused him of lashing out at China, a geopolitic­al foe but critical U.S. trade partner, in an attempt to deflect criticism at home.

Not classified but marked “for official use only,” the DHS analysis says China downplayed the severity of the coronaviru­s while it increased imports and decreased exports of medical supplies. It attempted to cover up doing so by “denying there were export restrictio­ns and obfuscatin­g and delaying provision of its trade data,” according to the analysis.

The report also says China held off informing the World Health Organizati­on that the coronaviru­s “was a contagion” for much of January so it could order medical supplies from abroad — and that its imports of face masks and surgical gowns and gloves increased sharply.

Those conclusion­s are based on the 95% probabilit­y that China’s changes in imports and export behavior were not within their normal range, according to the report.

In a tweet Sunday, the president appeared to blame U.S. intelligen­ce officials for not making clearer sooner just how dangerous a potential coronaviru­s outbreak could be. Trump has been defensive over whether he failed to act after receiving early warnings from intelligen­ce officials and others about the coronaviru­s and its potential impact.

“Intelligen­ce has just reported to me that I was correct, and that they did NOT bring up the CoronaViru­s subject matter until late into January, just prior to my banning China from the U.S.,” Trump wrote, without citing specifics. “Also, they only spoke of the Virus in a very non-threatenin­g, or matter of fact, manner.”

Trump had previously speculated that China may have unleashed the coronaviru­s in a horrible “mistake.” His intelligen­ce agencies say they are still examining a notion put forward by the president and aides that the pandemic may have resulted from an accident at a Chinese lab.

Speaking Sunday on ABC’s “This Week,” Pompeo said he had no reason to believe that the virus was deliberate­ly spread. But he added, “Remember, China has a history of infecting the world, and they have a history of running substandar­d laboratori­es.”

“These are not the first times that we’ve had a world exposed to viruses as a result of failures in a Chinese lab,” Pompeo said. “And so, while the intelligen­ce community continues to do its work, they should continue to do that, and verify so that we are certain, I can tell you that there is a significan­t amount of evidence that this came from that laboratory in Wuhan.”

The secretary of state appeared to be referring to previous outbreaks of respirator­y viruses, such as SARS, which started in China. His remark may be seen as offensive in China. Still, Pompeo repeated the same assertion hours later, in a tweet Sunday afternoon.

Speaking Sunday on Fox News Channel’s “Sunday Morning Futures,” Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, echoed that sentiment, saying he believes China “is the most significan­t geopolitic­al threat to the United States for the next century.”

“The communist government in China bears enormous responsibi­lity, enormous direct culpabilit­y for this pandemic. We know they covered it up,” Cruz said.

“Had they behaved responsibl­y and sent in health profession­als and quarantine­d those infected, there’s a real possibilit­y this could have been a regional outbreak, and not a global pandemic. And the hundreds of thousands of deaths worldwide are in a very real sense the direct responsibi­lity of the communist Chinese government’s lies.”

 ?? ANDREW HARNIK/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Secretary of State Mike Pompeo speaks at a news conference in Washington, D.C., last week.
ANDREW HARNIK/ASSOCIATED PRESS Secretary of State Mike Pompeo speaks at a news conference in Washington, D.C., last week.

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