USA TODAY US Edition

Biden signs bill ordering COVID-19 origins declassifi­ed

- Maureen Groppe and Joey Garrison

WASHINGTON – President Joe Biden on Monday signed legislatio­n ordering the declassifi­cation of informatio­n related to the origins of COVID-19, a mystery that has divided the eight U.S. government agencies investigat­ing the source.

The Republican-sponsored bill, which sailed through the House and Senate without opposition, requires the director of national intelligen­ce to release the informatio­n within 90 days.

The government can, however, withhold intelligen­ce to protect how it was collected.

The White House confirmed the president’s signature Monday evening after declining to reveal Biden’s position on the bill the past week, staying noncommitt­al up to the signing.

“I share the Congress’s goal of releasing as much informatio­n as possible about the origin of Coronaviru­s Disease 2019 (COVID–19),” Biden said in a statement. “We need to get to the bottom of COVID-19’s origins to help ensure we can better prevent future pandemics.”

The legislatio­n applies only to material related to the Wuhan Institute of Virology as a potential source of the virus that causes COVID-19 – a politicall­y charged issue. Republican­s have accused Biden of not being tough enough on China.

The virus first appeared in 2019 in the Chinese city of Wuhan.

New evidence cited by the World Health Organizati­on contribute­s to the theory that the virus originated from animals.

Samples collected at a Chinese seafood market in Wuhan show raccoon dog DNA comingled with the virus.

The genetic sequences were recently added by Chinese scientists to a public virus database – and then removed, but not before the informatio­n was shared.

Biden pointed to his 2021 directive for the federal government to study the origins of COVID-19 – an effort that is still ongoing – and said his administra­tion “will continue to review all classified informatio­n relating to COVID-19’s origins, including potential links to the Wuhan Institute of Virology.”

In implementi­ng the legislatio­n, Biden said his administra­tion will declassify and share “as much of that informatio­n as possible,” consistent with his constituti­onal authority not to disclose informatio­n that would harm national security.

Only one of the eight agencies that investigat­ed the link initially favored the institute as the likely source, according to the declassifi­ed summary of government investigat­ions submitted to the White House in 2021.

Since then, the Wall Street Journal reported that the Energy Department – which had been one of three agencies unable to reach a conclusion – now leans toward the theory that the virus leaked from the virology institute.

Four intelligen­ce agencies and the National Intelligen­ce Council concluded, with low confidence, that the virus likely spread to humans from an infected animal.

Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo., who sponsored the declassifi­cation bill, celebrated Biden’s decision to sign it.

He wrote in a tweet, “Let the people see for themselves! Huge victory for transparen­cy. Now time for accountabi­lity.”

After taking control of the House in January, Republican­s made investigat­ing the origins of COVID one of their top priorities.

Rep. Michael Turner, the Ohio Republican who heads the House Intelligen­ce Committee, said his panel is aware of informatio­n that could help explain why “a lab leak theory is not just a possibilit­y but approaches the idea that it is likely.”

“The intelligen­ce community does have more informatio­n about COVID-19 than the public is led to believe,” Turner said when the House debated the legislatio­n March 10. “This laboratory and who was working there might be the key to unraveling the truth.”

Connecticu­t Rep. Jim Himes, the top Democrat on the House Intelligen­ce Committee, said the classified informatio­n shows there’s no answer yet.

But Himes said the government should release as much declassifi­ed informatio­n as possible because transparen­cy is critical.

“The factual grounding of the (intelligen­ce communitie­s’) analysis can be an antidote to the speculatio­n, the rumor, and the theories that grow in the absence of good informatio­n,” he said.

“We need to get to the bottom of COVID-19’s origins to help ensure we can better prevent future pandemics.”

President Joe Biden

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