WH takes light touch on getting truth from China
The Biden administration will not take a hard line with China about cooperating in an investigation into the origins of COVID-19, the White House’s national security adviser admitted Sunday.
“We are not at this point going to issue threats or ultimatums,” Jake Sullivan said on CNN’s “State of the Union.”
“What we’re going to do is continue to rally support in the international community.
“And if it turns out that China refuses to live up to its international obligations, we will have to consider our responses at that point.”
Instead, Sullivan said, the approach to determine whether the deadly virus began in a Chinese lab would follow “two tracks,” including supporting a World Health Organization-led investigation.
“One track is an intelligencecommunity assessment that President Biden ordered,” he told CNN’s Dana Bash.
“The second track is an international investigation led by the World Health Organization, for which President Biden has rallied democratic partners to say there must be access to China, to be able to get the data necessary to understand what happened here.”
But Bash quickly shot back, pointing out that the hands-off approach gives China a lot of leeway.
“Well, this is not a question of time, Dana. First of all we are in the process of using our own capacities, our own capabilities to begin to develop a clearer picture,” Sullivan responded.
“I will repeat what I said before: We’re not going to simply accept China saying no, but we will work between now and when this second phase of the WHO investigation is fully underway to have as strong a consensus in the international community as possible, because it is from that position of strength that we will best be able to deal with China.”