Source:
https://expose-news.com/2023/07/30/proof-officials-knew-covid-came-from-a-lab/
How was propaganda at the beginning of the pandemic carefully crafted to hide the truth? At what lengths did officials go to bury the truth? This should raise serious questions surrounding the true agenda at play.
Recently published documents shed light on deliberations among scientists in the earliest days of the pandemic. Was the ‘Proximal Origin’ paper influenced by Fauci and other government officials who wanted to bury any discussion of a probable lab leak?
US House Republicans investigating the origin of covid inadvertently released a trove of new documents that shed light on deliberations among the scientists in the earliest days of the pandemic.
On 11 July 2023, the subcommittee on the origin of covid held a hearing on the ‘Proximal Origin’ paper, in which they questioned Dr. Robert Garry of Tulane University and Dr. Kristian Andersen of Scripps, two of the paper’s authors.
On 1 February 2020, Dr. Anthony Fauci convened a conference call with nearly a dozen scientists. Their scientific consensus was that SARS-CoV-2 appeared to be genetically engineered and that the pandemic was likely the result of a lab escape.
Later that day, several of the authors drafted a paper that drew the opposite conclusion. ‘The Proximal Origin of Sars-Cov-2’, a letter to the editor, was published in Nature Medicine on 17 March 2020. It ended up being widely cited by corporate media as evidence of a scientific consensus that the virus emerged naturally and jumped species.
According to a 12 July 2023 article by Ryan Grim published by The Intercept,1 US House Republicans investigating the origin of covid “appear to have inadvertently released a trove of new documents … that shed light on deliberations among the scientists who drafted a key paper in February and March of 2020.”
The paper in question is ‘The Proximal Origin of Sars-Cov-2’,2 a letter to the editor of Nature Medicine published on 17 March 2020. This letter ended up being widely cited by corporate media as evidence of a scientific consensus that the virus emerged naturally and jumped species.
The House Subcommittee on the origin of covid devoted an entire report to this paper, showing how the authors presented a false conclusion to the public while privately believing the virus had escaped from the Wuhan Institute of Virology (“WIV”).
The report was published on 11 July 2023, the same day the subcommittee also held a hearing on the ‘Proximal Origin’ paper, in which they questioned Robert Garry, PhD, of Tulane University and Kristian Andersen, PhD, of Scripps, two of the scientists involved in its creation. The Intercept explains how more information than intended ended up out in the open:3
The original subcommittee report has now been taken down.
Background
On 1 February 2020, Dr. Anthony Fauci, then-director of the National Institutes of Allergies and Infectious Diseases (“NIAID”) and Dr. Francis Collins, then-director of the National Institutes of Health (“NIH”) convened a conference call with 11 scientists to discuss covid-19.
On that conference call, Drs. Fauci and Collins were warned that covid may have leaked from the Wuhan Institute of Virology (“WIV”) – and that the virus appeared to be the result of genetic engineering. Minutes from the call reveal a lab escape was in fact the consensus among the gathered experts on that day.
Yet later that very day, a first draft of the ‘Proximal Origin’ paper had been written, and three days later, on 4 February, Fauci was sent a copy for editing and approval. The authors have maintained that new information changed their minds, but what, exactly, could they have learned in that short time? As it turns out, nothing.
According to The Intercept, “Slack messages and emails show that their initial inclination toward a lab escape remained long past that time.” So, as initially suspected, the ‘Proximal Origin’ paper appears to have been nothing more than an attempt to control the narrative.
Zoonotic Origin Pushers Suspected Lab Leak
“In a Slack exchange on 2 February 2020, between Andersen and Andrew Rambaut of the University of Edinburgh’s Institute of Evolutionary Biology in the School of Biological Sciences, it becomes clear how seriously the authors took the hypothesis that covid may have leaked from a lab … before they ultimately became dedicated to publicly dismissing it,” Grim writes.5
In that Slack exchange, Andersen wrote:
RaTG13 refers to a virus found in a Chinese mine in 2013 after several miners had fallen ill with covid-like symptoms. This virus was stored and researched at the WIV. Rambaut replied to Andersen’s comment:6
Rambaut also noted:7
While Andersen agreed with Rambaut’s comment, saying “Yup. I totally agree that that’s a very reasonable conclusion,” he still, clearly, did not believe that covid was caused by zoonotic transfer. Earlier in that same Slack thread, Andersen stressed that:8
The choice of words is ironic, considering the lab leak theory was dismissed as a fringe conspiracy theory in large part thanks to Andersen’s ‘Proximal Origin’ paper, which boldly proclaimed that: “Our analyses clearly show that SARS-CoV-2 is not a laboratory construct or a purposefully manipulated virus” and that “we do not believe any type of laboratory scenario is plausible.”
How Involved Was Fauci?
During the 11 July 2023 subcommittee hearing, Andersen insisted that Fauci and Collins had not influenced the conclusions presented in ‘Proximal Origin’, but doubts linger.
On 5 February 2020, Andersen wrote that suspicions of genetic engineering and bioweapons research were “definitely not going away,” and that he was being approached by journalists about it. “There might be a time where we need to tackle that more directly head on,” he wrote, “but I’ll let the likes of Jeremy [Farrar] and Tony [Fauci] figure out how to do that.”
And while Fauci and Collins didn’t figure out how to quash the theory for good, they sure tried. On 19 April 2020, Collins emailed Fauci expressing dismay that the ‘Proximal Origin’ paper had failed to quash the lab leak hypothesis, and asked Fauci if there was anything else the NIH could do to “put down this very destructive conspiracy theory.”9
The next day, Fauci cited the paper from the White House podium and told reporters that covid was “totally consistent with a jump of a species from an animal to a human.”10
There are also questions about whether Fauci and other government officials may have used private emails to cover up their coverup. During the hearing, the subcommittee chairman reported that the National Archives and Records Administration (“NARA”) is investigating the conduct of Dr. David M. Morens, senior scientific adviser to Fauci.
The investigation was launched after the subcommittee released a 2021 email by Morens to several ‘Proximal Origin’ authors, including Garry and Andersen, in which he admitted that he was using a personal Gmail account to evade the Freedom of Information Act (“FOIA”).11
Pressure From on High
In a 19 February 2020 email, Eddie Holmes, another one of the ‘Proximal Origin’ authors, also alluded to “pressure” being applied, although he didn’t name names:
According to Grim, “officials with the communications department at the NIH had been asking about the status of the submission,” and “taken as a whole, the messages undercut the claims that the NIH took a hands-off approach to the paper.”
“Impossible” to Reject Lab Leak Theory
Andersen’s reply to the journal Nature also reveals that dismissing the lab leak theory was impossible from the very beginning, based on the data. Before the ‘Proximal Origin’ paper was submitted to Nature Medicine, it had been pitched to – and rejected – by Nature.
The rejection letter specified that one reviewer thought the lab leak had to be conclusively rejected, lest it fuel conspiracy theories. According to that reviewer, once new pangolin sequences were published, “a lab origin will be extremely unlikely.” In a 20 February 2020 reply to Nature, Andersen wrote:
However, by the time the paper was submitted to Nature Medicine, it had been further edited to more strongly dismiss the possibility of a lab leak.
A Deeper Cover-Up at Play?
According to Republicans on the subcommittee on the origin of covid, the ‘Proximal Origin’ paper may have been unduly influenced by Fauci and other government officials who sought to downplay the possibility that covid might have emerged from the WIV – a lab with a long history of US funding of questionable gain-of-function research. Subcommittee chairman Rep. Brad Wenstrup, R-Ohio, said:12
Meanwhile, Garry, Andersen and certain Democrats tried to shift blame onto others, such as Sir Jeremy Farrar. However, by doing so, they only “highlight how insidious the process was,” independent journalist Sam Husseini – who live-tweeted the hearing – writes.13 Quoting from Husseini’s Substack article:14
Dutch virologist Ron Fouchier was also named as taking part in the meetings that led to the publication of ‘Proximal Origin’. As noted by Husseini, no one bothered to explain the importance of his presence either.
Fouchier launched a firestorm of controversy in 2011 when he used serial passage to make the avian flu airborne.16 The New York Times warned that his work might lead to an “engineered doomsday.”17
“But Fouchier didn’t sign any either the Lancet letter or ‘Proximal Origin’ – quite likely because his doing so would have made alarm bells go off,” Husseini writes.18
Sources and References
- 1, 3, 5, 6 The Intercept July 12, 2023
- 2 Nature Medicine March 17, 2020; 26: 450-452
- 4 Document Cloud Subcommittee on Coronavirus
- 7, 8, 9 The Nation July 12, 2023
- 10 USRTK April 11, 2023
- 11 The Intercept June 29, 2023
- 12 White House Oversight Committee July 11, 2023
- 13, 14, 18 Sam Husseini Substack July 13, 2023
- 15 The Lancet March 7, 2020; 395(10226): E42-E43
- 16 Science. 2012 Jun 22; 336(6088): 1534–1541
- 17 NYT January 7, 2012
About the Author
Dr. Joseph Mercola is the founder and owner of Mercola.com, a Board-Certified Family Medicine Osteopathic Physician, a Fellow of the American College of Nutrition and a New York Times bestselling author. He publishes multiple articles a day covering a wide range of topics on his website Mercola.com.
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