Houston Chronicle

Officials seek to tie virus to China lab

Intel agencies reportedly pushed to find proof

- By Mark Mazzetti, Julian E. Barnes, Edward Wong and Adam Goldman

WASHINGTON — Senior Trump administra­tion officials have pushed U.S. spy agencies to hunt for evidence to support an unsubstant­iated theory that a government laboratory in Wuhan, China, was the origin of the coronaviru­s outbreak, according to current and former U.S. officials. The effort comes as President Donald Trump escalates a public campaign to blame China for the pandemic.

Some intelligen­ce analysts are concerned that the pressure from administra­tion officials will distort assessment­s about the virus and that they could be used as a political weapon in an intensifyi­ng battle with China over a disease that has infected more than 3 million people across the globe.

Most intelligen­ce agencies remain skeptical that conclusive evidence of a link to a lab can be found, and scientists who have studied the genetics of the coronaviru­s say that the overwhelmi­ng probabilit­y is that it leapt from animal to human in a nonlaborat­ory setting, as was the case with HIV, Ebola and SARS.

Trump’s aides and Republican­s in Congress have sought to blame China for the pandemic in

part to deflect criticism of the administra­tion’s mismanagem­ent of the crisis in the United States, which now has more coronaviru­s cases than any country. More than 1 million Americans have been infected, and almost 63,000 have died.

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, a former CIA director and the administra­tion’s most vocal hard-liner on China, has taken the lead in pushing U.S. intelligen­ce agencies for more informatio­n, according to current and former officials.

Matthew Pottinger, the deputy national security adviser who reported on SARS outbreaks as a journalist in China, has pressed intelligen­ce agencies off and on since January to gather informatio­n that might support any origin theory linked to a lab.

And Anthony Ruggiero, the head of the National Security Council’s bureau tracking weapons of mass destructio­n, expressed frustratio­n during one videoconfe­rence in January that the CIA was unable to get behind any theory of the outbreak’s origin. CIA analysts responded that they simply did not have the evidence to support any one theory with high confidence at the time, according to people familiar with the conversati­on.

The CIA’s judgment was based in part on the fact that no signs had emerged that the Chinese government believed the outbreak came from a lab. The Chinese government has vigorously denied that the virus leaked from a lab while pushing disinforma­tion on its origins, including suggesting that the U.S. military created it.

‘A lot of theories’

Any U.S. intelligen­ce report blaming a Chinese institutio­n and officials for the outbreak could significan­tly harm relations with China for years to come. And Trump administra­tion officials could use it to try to prod other nations to publicly hold China accountabl­e for coronaviru­s deaths even when the pandemic’s exact origins cannot be determined.

Trump made clear Thursday evening of his interest in intelligen­ce supporting the theory the virus emerged accidental­ly from a Wuhan lab. In response to a question from a reporter, the president said he had seen intelligen­ce that supported the idea but quickly backtracke­d, adding that he “was not allowed” to share the intelligen­ce and that his administra­tion was examining multiple theories about the origin of the virus.

“There’s a lot of theories,” he said, “but we have people looking at it very, very strongly. Scientific people, intelligen­ce people and others.”

In a statement released earlier Thursday, the Office of the Director of National Intelligen­ce said that the intelligen­ce community “will continue to rigorously examine emerging informatio­n and intelligen­ce to determine whether the outbreak began through contact with infected animals or if it was the result of an accident at a laboratory in Wuhan.”

Intelligen­ce agencies, the statement said, concur “with the wide scientific consensus that the COVID-19 virus was not manmade or geneticall­y modified.”

NBC News reported earlier that administra­tion officials had directed intelligen­ce agencies to try to determine whether China and the World Health Organizati­on hid informatio­n early on about the outbreak.

For months, scientists, spies and government officials have wrestled with varying theories about how the outbreak began, and many agree on the importance of determinin­g the genesis of the pandemic. In government and academia, experts have ruled out the notion that it was concocted as a bioweapon. And they agree that the new pathogen began as a bat virus that evolved naturally, probably in another mammal, to become adept at infecting and killing humans.

A few scientists and national security experts have pointed to a history of lab accidents infecting researcher­s to suggest it might have happened in this case, but many scientists have dismissed such theories.

“We do not believe any type of laboratory-based scenario is plausible,” five scientists wrote in a paper published in March in Nature Medicine.

Trump has spoken publicly about the administra­tion’s “very serious investigat­ions” of the virus’s origin and China’s culpabilit­y. Those inquiries took on new urgency in late March, when intelligen­ce officials presented informatio­n to the White House that prompted some career officials to reconsider the lab theory. The precise nature of the informatio­n, based in part on intercepte­d communicat­ions among Chinese officials, is unclear.

The current and former officials did not say whether Trump himself has pressured the intelligen­ce agencies. But he does want any informatio­n supporting the lab theory to set the stage for holding China responsibl­e, according to two people familiar with his thinking.

He has expressed interest in an idea pushed by Michael Pillsbury, an informal China adviser to the White House, that Beijing could be sued for damages, with the United States seeking $10 million for every death. At a news conference this week, Trump said the administra­tion was discussing a “very substantia­l” reparation­s claim against China — an idea that Beijing has already denounced.

A scientific question

Major gaps remain in what is known about the new pathogen, including which kind of animal infected humans with the coronaviru­s and where the first transmissi­on took place.

Richard Grenell, the acting director of national intelligen­ce, has told his agencies to make a priority of determinin­g the virus’s origin. His office convened a review of intelligen­ce officials April 7 to see whether the agencies could reach a consensus. The officials determined that, at least so far, they could not.

Intelligen­ce officials have repeatedly pointed out to the White House that determinin­g the origins of the outbreak is fundamenta­lly a scientific question that cannot be solved easily by spycraft.

A former intelligen­ce official described senior aides’ repeated emphasis of the lab theory as “conclusion shopping,” a disparagin­g term among analysts that has echoes of the Bush administra­tion’s 2002 push for assessment­s saying that Iraq had weapons of mass of destructio­n and links to al-Qaida.

The CIA has yet to unearth any data beyond circumstan­tial evidence to bolster the lab theory, according to current and former government officials, and the agency has told policymake­rs it lacks enough informatio­n to either affirm or refute it. Only getting access to the lab itself and the virus samples it contains could provide definitive proof, if it exists, the officials said.

Some U.S. officials have become convinced that Beijing is not sharing all it knows.

Among Trump’s top aides, Pompeo in particular has tried to hammer China over the lab. On Wednesday, he said the United States still had not “gained access” to the main campus of the Wuhan Institute of Virology, one of two sites that U.S. officials who favor the lab accident theory have focused on, along with the Wuhan Center for Disease Control and Prevention.

Labs in Wuhan research bat viruses and are known to U.S. officials; they are part of a coordinate­d global effort to monitor viruses. The virology institute has received funding and training from U.S. agencies and scientists.

No evidence supports the theory that the coronaviru­s originated “in a laboratory either intentiona­lly or by accident,” Daniel R. Lucey, an expert on pandemics at Georgetown University who has closely tracked what is known about the origins, wrote this week.

He has called on China to share informatio­n about animals sold at a market in Wuhan that was linked to some of the earliest known cases of people infected with the virus, though not the first one. Lucey has raised questions about whether the market was, in fact, where the virus spilled over from animals to people. The limited informatio­n released about environmen­tal samples taken from the market that were positive for the coronaviru­s do not resolve whether the source was animals sold there or people working or visiting the market, or both, he wrote.

Richard Ebright, a microbiolo­gist and biosafety expert at Rutgers University, has argued that the probabilit­y of a lab accident was “substantia­l,” pointing to a history of such occurrence­s that have infected researcher­s. The Wuhan labs and other centers worldwide that examine naturally occurring viruses have questionab­le safety rules, he said, adding, “The standards are lax and need to be tightened.”

 ?? New York Times file photo ?? A woman speaks to hospital personnel wearing protective gear in January in Wuhan, China, the epicenter of the new coronaviru­s pandemic that has killed almost 63,000 in the United States.
New York Times file photo A woman speaks to hospital personnel wearing protective gear in January in Wuhan, China, the epicenter of the new coronaviru­s pandemic that has killed almost 63,000 in the United States.

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