Enterprise-Record (Chico)

US intelligen­ce agencies doesn’t expect to determine the origins of COVID-19

- By Nomaan Merchant

WASHINGTON » Barring an unforeseen breakthrou­gh, intelligen­ce agencies won’t be able to conclude whether COVID-19 spread by animal-to-human transmissi­on or leaked from a lab, officials said Friday in releasing a fuller version of their review into the origins of the pandemic.

The paper issued by the Director of National Intelligen­ce elaborates on findings released in August of a 90-day review ordered by President Joe Biden. That review said that U.S. intelligen­ce agencies were divided on the origins of the virus but that analysts do not believe the virus was developed as a bioweapon and that most agencies believe the virus was not geneticall­y engineered.

China has resisted global pressure to cooperate fully with investigat­ions into the pandemic or provide access to genetic sequences of coronaviru­ses kept at the Wuhan Institute of Virology, which remains a subject of speculatio­n for its research and reported safety problems. Biden launched the review amid growing momentum for the theory — initially broadly dismissed by experts — that the virus leaked from the Wuhan lab. Former President Donald Trump and his supporters long argued that a lab leak was possible as they sought to deflect criticism of his handling of the pandemic.

China remains an exceedingl­y difficult place for intelligen­ce operations and has fought back against allegation­s that it mishandled the emergence of the pandemic, which has killed 5 million people worldwide. Senior officials involved in the full report’s drafting said they hoped it would better inform the public about the challenges of determinin­g the virus’s origins.

“We don’t think we’re one or two reports away from being able to understand it,” said one official, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss intelligen­ce matters.

The full report notes that the Wuhan Institute of Virology “previously created chimeras, or combinatio­ns, of SARS-like coronaviru­ses, but this informatio­n does not provide insight into whether SARS Cov-2 was geneticall­y engineered by the WIV.”

Informatio­n that lab researcher­s sought medical treatment for a respirator­y illness in November 2019 “is not diagnostic of the pandemic’s origins,” the report said.

And allegation­s that China launched the virus as a bioweapon were dismissed because their proponents “do not have direct access to the Wuhan Institute of Virology,” are making scientific­ally invalid claims or are accused of spreading disinforma­tion, the report said.

Four agencies within the intelligen­ce community said with low confidence that the virus was initially transmitte­d from an animal to a human. A fifth intelligen­ce agency believed with moderate confidence that the first human infection was linked to a lab.

Prior to writing the report, analysts conducted what the report describes as a “Team A/Team B” debate to try to strengthen or weaken each hypothesis.

The report identifies types of data that investigat­ors still want China to provide access to, including records and tissue samples from several markets in Wuhan, including the Huanan Seafood Wholesale Market, Qiyimen Live Animal Market, Dijiao Outdoor Pet Market and others. Scientists originally believed the virus emerged from animals sold at the Huanan market, which they have since ruled out.

Confirming with 100% certainty the origin of a virus is often not fast, easy or always even possible.

In the case of Severe Acute Respirator­y Syndrome, or SARS — a disease caused by a beta coronaviru­s, like the current coronaviru­s — researcher­s first identified the virus in February 2003. Later that year, scientists discovered the likely intermedia­ry hosts: Himalayan palm civets found at live-animal markets in Guangdong, China. But it wasn’t until 2017 that researcher­s traced the likely original source of the virus to bat caves in China’s Yunnan province.

 ?? SUSAN WALSH — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Director of National Intelligen­ce Avril Haines introduces President Joe Biden during a visit to the agency’s office in McLean, Va.
SUSAN WALSH — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Director of National Intelligen­ce Avril Haines introduces President Joe Biden during a visit to the agency’s office in McLean, Va.

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