Department of State were warned by their higher-ups not to investigate the theory that the Wuhan coronavirus (COVID-19) was engineered in a lab in Wuhan and escaped because it would “open Pandora’s box.”
“It smelled like a cover-up,” said Thomas DiNanno, former acting assistant secretary of the State Department’s
Bureau of Arms Control, Verification and Compliance (AVC). DiNanno’s attempt to investigate the lab leak theory was thwarted at every turn by hostile and antagonistic federal government personnel.
Vanity Fair. The other three individuals were David Asher, a former contracted senior investigator who ran the State Department’s day-to-day COVID-19 origins inquiry, David Feith, former deputy assistant secretary of state in the
Nearly 18 months after word of a deadly new virus began leaking out of Wuhan, China, the Chinese governmentâs response remains fundamentally hostile to international cooperation and transparency. Despite hundreds of offers of assistance, polite diplomatic entreaties, and demands for access to data by governments and health authorities across the globe, the world still knows far too little about COVID-19âs origin. As in a Dali painting, the clocks have melted but time has not stood still.
Chinaâs initial silencing and censoring of its doctors and scientists, followed by misinformation about COVID-19âs dangersâespecially denials concerning the virusâs ability to be spread human-to-human, invisibly and asymptomaticallyâhelped cost the world trillions of dollars and millions of lives.
Written by Steven HansenThe U.S. new cases 7-day rolling average are 32.8 % LOWER than the 7-day rolling average one week ago and U.S. deaths due to coronavirus are now 8.5 % LOWER than the rolling average one week ago. Today s posts include:
At least four State Department employees said in separate interviews that they repeatedly were 'warned' that an investigation into a possible COVID-19 leak from the Wuhan lab would 'open Pandora's Box;' and reveal that the U.S. funded.
Chris Ford (top right) warned his State Department colleague Thomas DiNanno (bottom right) that he was risking embarrassing the U.S. with unverified COVID lab leak claims.