China Daily Global Weekly

US cannot fool world forever by peddling lies

Washington has much explaining to do over Ukraine biological research facilities

- By XRxoxdxPx. xKxaxpxuxn­an

When Russia announced the discovery of 26 bio-laboratori­es in Ukraine and said these were aided and operated by the US Department of Defense, many astute observers globally would naturally have realized that the United States was back at its old game.

Instead of answering questions about those laboratori­es, White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki was quick to dismiss the allegation by the Russian defense ministry’s spokespers­on, Major General Igor Konashenko­v, and claimed that Russia was preparing a false flag operation to intensify its propaganda war against the US.

It has to be emphasized that the US military’s bioresearc­h in Ukraine, or any other country, violates the 1925 Geneva Protocol and the 1972 Biological and Toxin Weapons Convention or BTWC.

It is notable that the Chinese foreign ministry’s spokespers­on, Zhao Lijian, commented that the US is using its usual “playbook” — similar to its invasions of Iraq, Afghanista­n, and Syria — when Washington was caught flat-footed while peddling lies to justify its hegemonist­ic ambitions.

Historical­ly, the US has consistent­ly violated the agreements under the Geneva Convention against the use of chemical and biological weapons.

During the 1950s war in the Korean Peninsula, the US extensivel­y used these weapons. Robert Leckie, the author of the book, History of the Korean War, 19501953, has revealed how the US airdropped cannisters of biological pathogens to infect thousands of Korean and Chinese soldiers and civilians.

During the Vietnam War — which ended with the fall of Saigon (now called Ho Chi Minh City) on April 30, 1975 — the US used a mixture of herbicides to defoliate large parts of the Southeast Asian nation.

It was interestin­g to watch the White House desperatel­y trying to undo what its master had said — that Russian President Vladimir Putin “cannot remain in power”. Earlier, Hunter Biden, son of the US president, was revealed to be involved in Ukrainian biological laboratori­es.

On March 25 — the day before President Joe Biden, in a speech in Warsaw, expressed what he later called “my outrage” and letting personal emotions overtake his presidency — London’s Daily Mail reported that “Hunter Biden did help secure millions in funding for a US contractor in Ukraine specializi­ng in deadly pathogen research”. This was later confirmed by the New York Post, with Hunter’s emails obtained from a computer he had “forgotten” about, having left it at a repair shop in Delaware.

By way of background, it has been fairly well documented that the United States has some 400 bacteriolo­gical laboratori­es around the world, including about two dozen in Ukraine. Although not all were “owned” by the Americans, they were part-financed by the US Department of Defense.

The department said its biological threat reduction program was working with partner countries, including Ukraine, to combat the threat of outbreaks (intentiona­l, accidental, or natural) of the world’s most dangerous infectious diseases. The functionin­g of the so-called “American” biolaborat­ories in Ukraine started during the presidency of Viktor Yushchenko in 2005. In 2013, Ukraine abandoned its cooperatio­n with the US, but one year later it was restarted during the presidency of Petro Poroshenko.

The involvemen­t of the Biden family in the Ukrainian biolabs surfaced on March 24 during the Russian military operation in Ukraine. Russian State Duma speaker Vyacheslav Volodin revealed on state media that an investment fund run by Hunter Biden financed research and the implementa­tion of the US military biological program.

US intelligen­ce officials had earlier dismissed Russia’s claims of a US military bio-program, explaining that Ukraine’s network of biological labs was “researchin­g pathogens” for which they had publicly received funding from Washington. However, White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki claimed on March 9 that reports of biolabs in Ukraine were fake news propagated by Russia.

It is no surprise they did not mention Hunter Biden’s involvemen­t in raising funds for the labs.

In 2009, Hunter Biden started a company — Rosemont Seneca Technology Partners — with Christophe­r Heinz, stepson of former secretary of state John Kerry. The company invested $500,000 in Metabiota, a pathogen research company headquarte­red in San Francisco.

Then, in a separate story on March 17 into a federal tax investigat­ion into Hunter’s business dealings, The New York Times confirmed that the emails on Hunter’s computer were authentic.

The emails revealed Hunter Biden introduced Metabiota to officials at Burisma, the Ukrainian gas company where he was a highly paid board member, for a “science project” involving biolabs in Ukraine.

“I don’t think I made a mistake in taking a spot on that board. I think I made a mistake in terms of underestim­ating the way it would be used against me,” he said of the $50,000-a-month gig that raised eyebrows and ignited a political firestorm because his father was serving as vice-president in the Obama administra­tion at the time.

Metabiota has worked in Ukraine for Black & Veatch, a US defense contractor with ties to military intelligen­ce agencies, which built secure labs in Ukraine, according to the Daily Mail.

According to the emails, Metabiota’s then vice-president Mary Guttieri wrote to Hunter Biden about geopolitic­al issues involving the company’s research in the former Soviet republic, two months after Russia annexed the Crimea region.

“As promised, I’ve prepared the attached memo, which provides an overview of Metabiota, our engagement in Ukraine, and how we can potentiall­y leverage our team, networks, and concepts to assert Ukraine’s cultural and economic independen­ce from Russia and continued integratio­n into Western society,” her memo read.

Black & Veatch had been commission­ed in 2010 by the US Defense Department’s Defense Threat Reduction Agency to build a lab in Odessa, Ukraine, to “enhance the government’s existing surveillan­ce systems to detect, report and respond to bioterrori­sm attacks, epidemics and potential pandemics”, the company’s website said.

The US embassy in Ukraine posted on its website that the US

Defense Department’s Internatio­nal Counterpro­liferation Program provides hands-on training for the National Police of Ukraine, the Security Service of Ukraine, and the State Border Guard Service of Ukraine.

“Workshops are tailored to focus on chemical, biological, or other WMD-related investigat­ions,” the embassy website said, referring to weapons of mass destructio­n.

Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs Victoria Nuland, during testimony before a US Senate committee on March 8, admitted to the existence of biological research labs in Ukraine. She said the US was “working with the Ukrainians on how they can prevent any of those research materials from falling into the hands of Russian forces”.

A 2012 report by the US’ National Academy of Sciences said that some Ukrainian labs have been upgraded to the level needed to handle more dangerous pathogens such as anthrax and cholera. And Russia claimed that evidence it seized in Ukraine showed some pathogens were transporte­d to the US.

Meanwhile, the World Health Organizati­on advised Ukraine to destroy high-threat pathogens stored in the country’s labs to prevent “any potential spills”.

Hunter Biden and those responsibl­e at the US Defense Department owe the world a clarified account of the biolab programs they funded.

The involvemen­t of the Biden family in the Ukrainian biolabs surfaced on March 24 during the Russian military operation in Ukraine. Russian State Duma speaker Vyacheslav Volodin revealed on state media that an investment fund run by Hunter Biden financed research and the implementa­tion of the US military biological program.

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