
Top U.S. health officials, including Anthony Fauci, scrambled in late January 2020 to respond to public reporting of a potential connection between COVID-19 and the Wuhan Institute of Virology in China.
The insight into their response comes from examining over 3,000 pages of emails belonging to Fauci, the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), which were released under the Freedom of Information Act and provide a detailed timeline of events.
The emails suggest the officials were concerned about previous U.S. involvement with the lab, and that they had knowledge of public statements made by the Wuhan labโs director about U.S. funding being used for controversial research conducted there.
Following the officialsโ conversations, public discussion of the source being a potential lab leak was actively suppressed by social media platforms, health officials, and the World Health Organization (WHO).
Jan. 31, 2020
Fauci received an email at 8:43 p.m. (p. 3229) by an associate, Greg Folkers of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), the federal agency responsible for public health research. The email contained no text and held only a single, lengthy article that had been published in the magazine Science that evening.
The article, authored by Jon Cohen, was one of the earliest stories that described how scientists were working frantically on โviral genomesโ in order to โunderstand the origin of 2019-nCoV.โ
The article focused on the theory that the virus originated in a Wuhan seafood market, and the author took pains to discount the lab leak theory, noting that the viral sequences โknock down the idea the pathogen came from a virology institute in Wuhan.โ
However, the author did note that โconcerns about the institute predate this outbreak,โ and also detailed how a scientist โin 2015ย criticized an experimentย in which modifications were made to a SARS-like virus circulating in Chinese bats to see whether it had the potential to cause disease in humans.โ
The experiment cited in the Science article was more fully detailed in a Nov. 9, 2015, article in the journal Nature about gain-of-function experimentsโa process whereby viruses are deliberately made more virulent in order to predict emerging diseasesโthat were being conducted at the Wuhan lab using โchimeric virusesโ in mice.
The articleโs authors, including the director of the Wuhan lab, Shi Zhingli, noted that their research was initiated before the U.S. government introduced a moratorium on gain-of-function research. They added that their paper โhas been reviewed by the funding agency,โ and, crucially, that โcontinuation of these studies was requested, and this has been approved by the NIH.โ
BYย JEFF CARLSONย ANDย HANS MAHNCKE