In this Feb. 3, 2021, file photo, a security person moves journalists away from the Wuhan Institute of Virology after a World Health Organization team arrived for a field visit in Wuhan in China’s Hubei province. A member of the . more > By Joseph Clark - The Washington Times - Wednesday, June 30, 2021
Senate Republicans are calling on the chamber’s leadership to halt confirmation of nominees involved in ending an investigation into the origins of COVID-19.
Sens. Bill Hagerty and Marsha Blackburn of Tennessee and Roger Marshall of Kansas said two nominees for State Department positions, Elliot Kang and Bonnie Jenkins, should clarify their roles in ending an inquiry into whether the virus originated in China’s Wuhan Institute of Virology, which they say the Biden administration ended prematurely.
Pause Biden nominees for questions on role in COVID-19 origins inquiry, GOP senators say
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Ex-Pentagon UFO office chief has explained whether China is behind UAP sightings which took US nuclear systems offline repeatedly
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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