Lawmakers who have long pressed for transparency on the origin of COVID-19 said they are underwhelmed by a declassified U.S. intelligence report, saying that the administration hasn’t been fully transparent with what it knows.
Although it provides glimpses into activities at the Wuhan lab before the pandemic, the 10-page report—including three pages in appendices—doesn’t conclusively state whether the virus came from nature or the lab.
“This Friday night ‘news’ dump of a mere 10-page summary is a slap in the face of Americans who deserve full transparency about what information the government possesses regarding the origins of COVID-19,” said Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgers (R-Wash.), who chairs the House Energy and Commerce Committee.
“Perhaps the most important lesson we’ve learned throughout the pandemic is that our government must be honest and forthcoming if we are ever to restore public trust and obtain justice for the victims of the pandemic—both those who lost their lives to the virus and those whose lives were harmed by unscientific lockdowns and mandates. This report fails to live up to either.”
Rep. Mike Gallagher (R-Wis.), who sits on the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence, noted reports earlier in the week confirming names of the Wuhan virology lab researchers who had fallen ill with COVID-like symptoms in the autumn of 2019.
The June 23 report raised biosafety concerns with WIV’s handling of SARS-like viruses, the shortage of properly trained personnel at the facility, and experiments on SARS-like coronavirus in lower biosafety labs in early 2019 despite known risks. It maintained that the presence of sick researchers “neither supports nor refutes either hypothesis of the pandemic’s origins because the researchers’ symptoms could have been caused by a number of diseases and some of the symptoms were not consistent with COVID-19.”
Gallagher said that the intelligence officials should have released details on these researchers, including their names, symptoms, and involvement in coronavirus-related work at the Wuhan facility.
“This DNI release does none of that and, in many ways, obscures more than it illuminates,” he said, calling it “unacceptable.”
“The American people deserve better.”
Sen. Roger Marshall (R-Kans.) likewise suggested that the administration may have withheld information.
“As we’ve seen nearly every step of the way while trying to uncover the origins of the COVID-19 virus, the Biden Administration has failed to be transparent with the American people and members of Congress,” he said, stressing that the release “is late and does not provide the full picture of what our intelligence agencies know.”
He added that the intelligence officials should appear before the Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Government Affairs, of which he is a member, to “walk us through these materials so we can get to the bottom of the COVID-19 pandemic that killed over a million Americans.”
White Coat Waste Project, a nonprofit group that has been advocating for more scrutiny of WIV, called the latest U.S. intelligence report “underwhelming” and criticized it for failing to mention the U.S. taxpayer funding that the Wuhan lab received and details relating to the sick researchers.
Justin Goodman, White Coat Waste Project’s senior vice president, said, “Shipping US taxpayer dollars to the [People’s Liberation Army]-tied Wuhan animal lab was always a recipe for disaster.”