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General News    H3'ed 5/22/20

Tomgram: Bob Dreyfuss, Iraq Redux?

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It remains to be seen whether the Grenell-Ratcliffe tag-team, combined with Trump's three-year campaign to disparage the intelligence community and intimidate its functionaries, has softened them up enough for the administration's push to finger China and its labs for creating and spreading Covid-19.

The Wuhan Lab Lies

As is often the case, that campaign began rather quietly and unobtrusively in conservative and right-wing media outlets.

On January 24th, the right-wing Washington Times ran a story entitled "Coronavirus may have originated in a lab linked to China's biowarfare program." It, in turn, was playing off of a piece that had appeared in London's Daily Mail the previous day. Written like a science-fiction thriller, that story drew nearly all its (unverified) information from a single source, an Israeli military intelligence China specialist. Soon, it moved from the Washington Times to other American right-wing outlets. Steve Bannon picked it up the next day on his podcast, "War Room: Pandemic," calling the piece "amazing." A few days later, the unreliable, gossipy website ZeroHedge ran a (later much-debunked) piece saying that a Chinese scientist bioengineered the virus, purporting even to name the scientist.

A couple of weeks later, Fox News weighed in, laughably citing a Dean Koontz novel, The Eyes of Darkness, about "a Chinese military lab that creates a new virus to potentially use as a biological weapon during wartime." The day after that, Senator Tom Cotton -- appearing on Fox, of course -- agreed that China might indeed have created the virus. Then the idea began to go... well, viral. (Soon Cotton was even tweeting that Beijing might possibly have deliberately released the virus.) By late February, the right's loudest voice, Rush Limbaugh, was on the case, claiming that the virus "is probably a ChiCom laboratory experiment that is in the process of being weaponized." (A vivid account of how this conspiracy theory spread can be found at the Global Disinformation Index.)

Starting in March, even as they were dismissing the seriousness of Covid-19, both Trump and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo repeatedly insisted on referring to it as the "China virus" or the "Wuhan virus," ignoring criticism that terminology like that was both racist and inflammatory. In late March, Pompeo even managed to scuttle a communique' from America's allies in the Group of Seven, or G7, by demanding that they agree to use the term "Wuhan virus." It didn't take the president long to start threatening retaliatory action against China for its alleged role in spreading Covid-19, while he began comparing the pandemic to the 1941 Japanese sneak attack on Pearl Harbor.

And all of that was but a prelude to the White House ramping up of pressure on the CIA and the rest of the intelligence community to prove that the virus had indeed emerged, whether by design or accident, from either the Wuhan Institute of Virology or the Wuhan Center for Disease Control, a branch of the Chinese Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. An April 30th article in the New York Times broke the story that administration officials "have pushed American spy agencies to hunt for evidence to support an unsubstantiated theory that a government laboratory in Wuhan, China, was the origin of the coronavirus outbreak," and that Grenell had made it a "priority."

Both Trump and Pompeo would, in the meantime, repeatedly assert that they had seen actual "evidence" that the virus had indeed come from a Chinese lab, though Trump pretended that the information was so secret he couldn't say anything more about it. "I can't tell you that," he said. "I'm not allowed to tell you that." Asked during an appearance on ABC's This Week if the virus had popped out of a lab in Wuhan, Pompeo answered: "There is enormous evidence that that's where this began."

On April 30th, the Office of the Director of National Intelligence issued a terse statement, saying that so far it had concluded Covid-19 is "not manmade or genetically modified," but that they were looking into whether or not it was "the result of an accident at a laboratory in Wuhan." There is, however, no evidence of such an accident, nor did the ODNI cite any.

A Finger on the Scale

The run-up to the invasion of Iraq in 2002-2003 should be on all our minds today. Then, top officials simply repeated again and again that they believed both Saddam Hussein's nonexistent ties to al-Qaeda and his nonexistent active nuclear, chemical, and bioweapon programs were realities and assigned intelligence community collectors and analysts to look into them (while paying no attention to their conclusions). Now, Trump and his people are similarly putting their fat fingers on the scale of reality, while making it clear to hopefully intimidated intelligence professionals just what conclusions they want to hear.

Because those professionals know that their careers, salaries, and pensions depend on the continued favor of the politicians who pay them, there is, of course, a tremendous incentive to go along with such demands, shade what IC officials call the "estimate" in the direction the White House wants, or at least keep their mouths shut. That is exactly what happened in 2002 and, given that Grenell, Patel, and Ratcliffe are essentially Trump toadies, the IC officials lower on the totem pole have to be grimly aware of what their latest bosses expect from them.

There was near-instant pushback from scientists, intelligence officials, and China experts about the Trump-Pompeo campaign to finger the Wuhan lab. Dr. Anthony Fauci, the preeminent American scientist and Covid-19 expert, promptly shot it down, saying that the virus had "evolved in nature and then jumped species." That's because actual scientists, who study the genome of the virus and its mutations, unanimously agree that it was not generated in a lab.

Among America's allies -- Australia, Britain, Canada, and New Zealand -- in what's called the Five Eyes group, there was an unambiguous conclusion that the virus had been a "naturally occurring" one and had mutated in the course of "human and animal interaction." Australia, in particular, rejected what appeared to be a fake-intelligence dossier about the Wuhan lab, while German officials in an internal document ridiculed the lab rumors as "a calculated attempt to distract" attention from the Trump administration's own inept handling of the virus.

Finally, according to Bloomberg News, those studying the issue inside the intelligence community now say that suspicions it emerged from a lab are "largely circumstantial since the U.S. has very little information from the ground to back up the lab-escape theory or any other." In the end, however, that doesn't mean top IC officials beholden to the White House won't tailor their conclusions to fit the Trump-Pompeo narrative.

John McLaughlin, who served as deputy director and then acting director of the CIA during the Bush administration, believes that we are indeed seeing a replay of what happened in Iraq nearly two decades ago. "What it reminds me of is the dispute between the CIA and parts of the Bush administration over whether there was an operational relationship between Saddam Hussein and al-Qaeda," he said. "They kept asking the CIA, and we kept coming back and saying, 'You know, it's just not there.'"

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Tom Engelhardt, who runs the Nation Institute's Tomdispatch.com ("a regular antidote to the mainstream media"), is the co-founder of the American Empire Project and, most recently, the author of Mission Unaccomplished: Tomdispatch (more...)
 

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