CIA Director John Ratcliffe has said the recent decision to release a COVID-19 assessment was aimed at fostering transparency with the American people.
“I had the opportunity on my first day to make public an assessment that actually took place in the Biden administration, so it can’t be accused of being political,” Ratcliffe said.
“The CIA has assessed that the most likely cause of this pandemic that has wrought so much devastation around the world was because of a lab-related incident in Wuhan, so we'll continue to investigate that moving forward.
“I think it was important for the American people to see an institution like the CIA get off the sidelines and be truthful about what our intelligence shows and, at the same time, protect us from adversaries like China if they caused or contributed to this.”
A State Department fact sheet released in 2021 stated that China’s Wuhan Institute of Virology (WIV) had been conducting experiments on bat coronavirus starting in at least 2016. The institute has also carried out “laboratory animal experiments” for the Chinese military since at least 2017, it stated.
The fact sheet also stated that several researchers had contracted COVID-19-like symptoms in fall 2019, before the COVID-19 pandemic began.
Ratcliffe told Fox News that releasing the assessment was an effort by President Donald Trump to “restore Americans’ trust” in the U.S. intelligence community and law enforcement.
“The purpose of the CIA is to protect Americans, to keep us safe from foreign threats and foreign adversaries, but we also need to be truthful with Americans, and [Trump] has stressed to me and others that these aren’t mutually exclusive missions. We can do both,” Ratcliffe said.
The CIA’s decision drew applause from several lawmakers.
“The CCP knew the virus was spreading, but instead of warning the world, they perpetrated a massive coverup—burning lab evidence & detaining or killing doctors who spoke out,” he wrote.