USA TODAY International Edition

Secretive ‘ Z Division’ seeks origin of COVID

Biosecurit­y mission born in aftermath of 9/ 11

- Michael Collins and Josh Meyer

WASHINGTON – Tucked away in a secretive office, a little- known team of government scientists began looking into al- Qaida and the possibilit­y of a biological weapons attack after terrorists exposed a “gaping hole” in national security on Sept. 11, 2001.

Known simply as the “Z Division,” the team was establishe­d in the U. S. Department of Energy to help intelligen­ce agencies understand the significan­ce of Soviet nuclear weapons tests. But the 9/ 11 terrorist attacks would change its mission.

Two decades later, the Z Division finds itself in the middle of a storm as it tries to answer the question scientists, doctors and ordinary Americans are asking about the roots of the COVID- 19 pandemic: How did it happen?

A new classified intelligen­ce report prepared by experts from the Energy Department’s national laboratory complex, including scientists in the Z Division, concluded the pandemic probably started with an unintentio­nal laboratory leak in Wuhan, China. The findings have been sent to White House and key members of Congress, according to The Wall Street Journal, which first reported the news.

The report has ignited a backlash against the Biden administra­tion from members of the scientific community and elsewhere who are pushing the argument that the virus most likely emerged through natural means, such as animal- to- human transmissi­on.

The White House hasn’t endorsed the Energy Department’s findings, noting there is still disagreeme­nt across the government on the virus’ origins.

Four agencies within the intelligen­ce community have concluded with “low confidence” that the virus was initially transmitte­d from an ani

mal to a human, according to a report by the director of national intelligen­ce in October 2021. A fifth intelligen­ce agency believed with “moderate” confidence that the first human infection was linked to a lab.

FBI Director Christophe­r Wray said late Tuesday that the bureau – one of many U. S. intelligen­ce agencies involved in the pandemic outbreak investigat­ion – has assessed that the origin of the COVID- 19 pandemic was “most likely a potential lab incident” in Wuhan. Wray told Fox News’ Bret Baier in an interview that the FBI’s work on determinin­g where the pandemic originated is continuing, but many details related to the investigat­ion remain classified.

Now, the Energy Department’s new assessment, based on unspecified new intelligen­ce, reflects a change of heart for the agency.

The department had said earlier that it was undecided on how the virus was transmitte­d. But even its new conclusion­s were made with “low confidence,” meaning that the informatio­n on which the assessment was based was not reliable enough or that not enough data was available to reach a conclusion.

Why is the Energy Department investigat­ing COVID’s origins?

The Energy Department is one of 18 agencies and organizati­ons that make up the U. S. intelligen­ce community. The department has a division that specialize­s in the study of biological weapons.

How the intelligen­ce assessment was done

The White House did not respond to questions about the intelligen­ce assessment. But The Washington Post and The Wall Street Journal reported that the analysis was done by experts from the U. S. national laboratory complex, including members of the Z Division. Though initially undecided about COVID- 19’ s origins, the new intelligen­ce assessment prompted Department of Energy officials to conclude the virus spread was likely a result of a lab leak.

What is Z Division?

Z Division is housed in the Department of Energy’s nuclear complex, the result of an agreement in 1965 between the CIA and the Atomic Energy Commission.

Under the agreement, laboratory scientists and engineers who helped intelligen­ce agencies understand the significance of Soviet nuclear weapons tests were consolidat­ed into a special projects branch. They analyzed radiologic­al samples from nuclear tests by the Soviets, and later, the Chinese. In the mid- 1970s, Z Division started a nuclear proliferat­ion monitoring program that examined the nuclear weapons efforts of India, Pakistan, Israel, South Africa and other nations.

“In its heyday, it was really a storied place, especially for understand­ing of foreign nuclear weapons programs,” said Matthew Bunn, a former adviser to the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy, who now runs the nuclear proliferat­ion program at the Harvard Kennedy School of Government.

“I would say they’re one of the jewels in the crown of U. S. nuclear intelligen­ce.”

Bunn described Z Division as “more or less” the intelligen­ce arm of the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in California because it was responsibl­e not just for having a deep understand­ing of the technology of nuclear weapons and other threats but also the top- secret details about the political and organizati­onal aspects of foreign weapons programs and the leaders overseeing them.

“So when you had a new ambassador who was going out to a foreign country that had nuclear weapons, you’d send them out to Z Division to get the best briefing on that program,” Bunn told USA TODAY.

How 9/ 11 changed the mission of Z Division

After the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks on New York and Washington, the mission of Z Division changed dramatical­ly along with the rest of the Lawrence Livermore lab, the Department of Energy and the broader intelligen­ce community, according to Energy Department documents.

On 9/ 11, Susan Allen, a Z Division molecular biologist and intelligen­ce analyst, was giving a briefing in downtown Washington when word came that a plane had struck one of the towers of the World Trade Center, a Lawrence Livermore lab report from 2021 said.

Allen said she happened to pass by the Pentagon and saw “the gaping hole caused by the crashed American Airlines flight 77.” Allen flew home on Sept. 18. Back at the lab, the report said, “she began looking into al- Qaeda and the possibilit­y of a bio- terror attack.”

After working with Z Division’s biological weapons team for several weeks, she was assigned to Washington to support the U. S. intelligen­ce community.

The day Allen arrived, news broke of the first reported death from anthrax- laced letters sent to elected officials and prominent members of the media. She spent the next several weeks working 15- hour days to determine the source of the letters, advising the government and inspecting facilities and mail- handling operations, the lab report said.

“You worked as hard as you could all day and into the evening, and then went to the hotel and crashed and got up again the next day and did it all over again,” Allen said. “It was satisfying in the sense that you felt like you were doing something of value and having the impact for your country.”

In June 2021, The Wall Street Journal reported that Z Division researcher­s had helped prepare a report on the origins of COVID- 19 that concluded the theory that the virus leaked from a Chinese lab in Wuhan is plausible and deserved further investigat­ion, citing “people familiar with the classified document.”

The Journal said that the study was prepared in May 2020 by the Lawrence Livermore lab’s Z Division and that it was drawn on by the State Department when it conducted an inquiry into the pandemic’s origins during the final months of the Trump administra­tion.

The Journal said that the Lawrence Livermore lab has considerab­le expertise on biological weapons and that its assessment drew on genomic analysis of the SARS- COV- 2 virus, which causes COVID- 19.

What do Americans say about COVID- 19’ s origins?

Nearly half of Americans think COVID- 19 pandemic was caused by a lab leak in China, according to a Morning Consult poll released Tuesday.

Forty- four percent of U. S. adults polled said they believe the virus spilled from a virology lab in Wuhan, while just 26% believe the virus moved naturally from animals to humans. The share of Americans who believe the lab theory has held steady since June 2021, the pollster said.

 ?? MANDEL NGAN/ AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Director Christophe­r Wray says the FBI has assessed that the COVID- 19 pandemic’s origin was “most likely a potential lab incident” in Wuhan, China.
MANDEL NGAN/ AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES Director Christophe­r Wray says the FBI has assessed that the COVID- 19 pandemic’s origin was “most likely a potential lab incident” in Wuhan, China.

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