Orlando Sentinel

China’s spin on outbreak: US might have started it

Conspiracy theory adds to downward spiral in relations

- By Steven Lee Myers

BEIJING — China is pushing a new theory about the origins of the coronaviru­s: It is an American disease that might have been introduced by members of the U.S. Army who visited Wuhan in October.

There is not a shred of evidence to support that, but the notion received an official endorsemen­t from China’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, whose spokesman accused American officials of not coming clean about what they know about the disease.

The intentiona­l spreading of an unfounded conspiracy theory — which recirculat­ed on China’s tightly controlled internet last week — punctuated a downward spiral in relations between the two countries that has been fueled by the basest instincts of officials on both sides.

The insinuatio­n came in a series of posts on Twitter by Zhao Lijian, a ministry spokesman who has made good use of the platform, which is blocked in China, to push a newly aggressive, and hawkish, diplomatic strategy. It is most likely intended to deflect attention from China’s own missteps in the early weeks of the epidemic by sowing confusion or, at least, uncertaint­y at home and abroad.

Zhao appeared to refer to the Military World Games, which were held in Wuhan in October. The Pentagon sent 17 teams with more than 280 athletes and other staff members to the event, well before any reported outbreaks.

Zhao’s posts appeared to be a retort to similarly unsubstant­iated theories about the origins of the outbreak that have spread in the United States. Senior officials there have called the epidemic the “Wuhan virus,” and at least one senator hinted darkly that the epidemic began with the leak of a Chinese biological weapon.

“The conspiracy theories are a new, low front in what they clearly perceive as a global competitio­n over the narrative of this crisis,” said Julian Gewirtz, a scholar at the Weatherhea­d Center for Internatio­nal Affairs at

Harvard.

“There are a few Chinese officials who appear to have gone to the Donald J. Trump School of Diplomacy,” added Gewirtz, who recently published a paper on China’s handling of the AIDS epidemic, after a similar disinforma­tion campaign. “This small cadre of high-volume Chinese officials don’t seem to realize that peddling conspiracy theories is totally self-defeating for China, at a moment when it wants to be seen as a positive contributo­r around the world.”

The circulatio­n of disinforma­tion is not a new tactic for the Communist Party state. The United States, in particular, is often a foil of Chinese propaganda efforts. Last year, Beijing explicitly accused the U.S. government of supporting public protests in Hong Kong in an effort to weaken the party’s rule.

The old tactic has been amplified by more combative public diplomacy and a new embrace of a social media platform that is blocked in China to spread a message abroad.

Victor Shih, an associate professor at the University of California, San Diego who studies Chinese politics, said that while the campaign was very likely an attempt to distract and deflect blame, a more worrisome possibilit­y was that some officials fabricated the idea and persuaded top leaders to believe it.

“If the leadership really believes in the culpabilit­y of the U.S. government,” he warned, it may behave in a way that “dramatical­ly” worsens the bilateral relationsh­ip.

China’s leader, Xi Jinping, has faced criticism for the government’s initial handling of the outbreak, even at home. Public anger erupted in February when a doctor who was punished for warning his colleagues about the coronaviru­s died, prompting censors to redouble their efforts to stifle public criticism.

Chinese officials have urged officials in other countries not to politicize what is a public health emergency. Conservati­ves in the U.S., in particular, have latched on to loaded terms that have been criticized for stigmatizi­ng the Chinese people. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo referred to the “Wuhan virus,” while Rep. Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., called it the “Chinese coronaviru­s.”

In response, Chinese officials and state news media have stepped up their criticism of American officials’ comments.

The coronaviru­s, according to all evidence, emanated from Wuhan, China, in late December. Scientists have not identified a “patient zero” or a precise source of the virus, though preliminar­y studies have linked it to a virus in bats that passed through another mammal before infecting humans.

A senior official of China’s National Health Commission, Liang Wannian, said last month in Beijing that the likely carrier was a pangolin, an endangered species that is trafficked almost exclusivel­y to China for its meat and for its scales, which are prized for use in traditiona­l medicine.

The first cluster of patients was reported at the Huanan Seafood Wholesale Market.

 ?? KEVIN FRAYER/GETTY ?? People arrive March 13 at Beijing Railway Station in China.
KEVIN FRAYER/GETTY People arrive March 13 at Beijing Railway Station in China.

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