New York Post

Need To Know

Congress is asking the wrong Qs on COVID

- MARTY MAKARY

IMAGINE if a novel virus killed 20 million people and half of America’s politician­s actively downplayed questions about where it came from. Yet that’s what some members of Congress did Monday.

Rep. Debbie Dingell (D-Mich.) suggested that bringing Dr. Anthony Fauci, the former director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, before the House subcommitt­ee investigat­ing the origins of COVID-19 was a charade. “The evidence today points to COVID-19 having originated from an animal market,” declared Rep. Kathy Castor (D-Fla.).

They and others did not bother to ask how the National Institutes of Health evaded an Obama-era moratorium on gain-of-function research — a ban enacted out of concern that a lab leak could cause a pandemic. Nor did anyone ask Fauci about a 2018 experiment his division conducted, in which NIAID researcher­s tried to infect bats with Wuhan coronaviru­ses at the NIH’s Rocky Mountain Laboratori­es.

Why were US taxpayers funding research on Wuhan coronaviru­ses in Montana? We still don’t know.

Ironically, some of the greatest clues to the origins of COVID-19 have emerged from US government documents.

The Wuhan lab’s 2018 DEFUSE grant was a cookbook for geneticall­y engineerin­g COVID-19. Yet federal officials refused to make the details public until a brave whistleblo­wer did so.

There is overwhelmi­ng circumstan­tial evidence of the US government’s cozy relationsh­ip with the Wuhan lab through EcoHealth Alliance. But this informatio­n emerged via whistleblo­wers and FOIA requests, not because Fauci and other federal employees were forthcomin­g.

During the recent congressio­nal testimony of Dr. David Morens, Fauci’s right-hand man, we learned that NIAID scientists worked hard to conceal communicat­ions between Fauci and external virologist­s.

At one point, emails revealed, Morens boasted that he learned how to delete messages after a FOIA request had been filed to make them public. “So we’re safe,” he concluded.

Safe from what?

One FOIA-revealed document described secret meetings among top US virologist­s who, on Feb. 1, 2020, told Fauci they believed COVID-19 came from a lab. Days later, those same virologist­s published a scientific “study” in Nature, a major science journal, concluding definitive­ly that the pathogen was not lab-generated.

When questioned before the House in January, Fauci claimed he “did not recall” key details more than 100 times.

Yet on Monday, several members of the House subcommitt­ee had no questions for him about dangerous gain-of-function research — even though it’s still going on.

Earlier this year, a Chinese lab published a new virus manipulati­on experiment, and two years ago Boston University researcher­s alarmed government officials when they reported they had made a COVID virus strain more lethal.

How can we seriously prepare for the next pandemic without properly investigat­ing how the last one started — and putting a halt to the type of experiment­s that clearly produced COVID-19?

This should be the least partisan issue in the country. But Fauci has emerged as a partisan figure aligned with the Democratic Party.

At Monday’s hearing, when Rep. Jill Tokuda (D-Hawaii) mocked the Great Barrington Declaratio­n, an alternativ­e to the pandemic lockdown regime, Dr. Fauci chimed in, asserting it was a flawed strategy.

But neither mentioned the clear data that Sweden, which used the Great Barrington approach, had far fewer deaths per capita than the United States suffered — a searing indictment of our COVID-19 policy.

Fauci apologists are convenient­ly retreating to the position that we will simply never know the origin of COVID-19. We should therefore stop investigat­ing the cozy relationsh­ip between the US government and the Wuhan lab, they say.

But the entire COVID-19 pandemic was most likely avoidable. To actually prevent a future pandemic, a modicum of humility from Fauci and his fellow advocates for risky gain-of-function research is the necessary first step.

Marty Makary MD, MPH is a professor at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine and author of the forthcomin­g book “Blind Spots: When medicine gets it wrong and what it means for our health.”

 ?? ?? No blame: The bitter divide in Congress is helping Dr. Anthony Fauci beat the rap on his COVID-19 failures.
No blame: The bitter divide in Congress is helping Dr. Anthony Fauci beat the rap on his COVID-19 failures.

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