What
did they know, exactly? US intel warned of ‘cataclysmic’ coronavirus pandemic
in NOVEMBER 2019, report claims
8 Apr, 2020 21:54 / Updated 9 hours ago
FILE PHOTO: US military personnel
wearing face masks arrive at the Jacob K. Javits Convention Center in New York
City as the Covid-19 outbreak continues. © Reuters / Eduardo
Munoz
US military intelligence tried to raise the alarm about the coronavirus
epidemic in China when it was still embryonic in November, inside sources claim
– raising questions of what they knew and who ignored, or squashed the report.
Not only had the coronavirus epidemic begun spiraling out of control in
Wuhan by November 2019, but military analysts were already warning it “could
be a cataclysmic event” for both China and the US, four sources
familiar with the briefings told ABC on Wednesday. Analysts at the National
Center for Medical Intelligence, a subsidiary of the Pentagon’s Defense
Intelligence Agency, had been trying to alert Pentagon and Donald Trump
administration officials of the looming catastrophe for months before the
country finally took action, the sources claim.
Based on detailed analysis of intercepted communications and satellite
imagery, the NCMI reportedly projected that a virulent contagion already getting
out of hand in Wuhan would soon be menacing not just China but US troops
stationed nearby. Most intriguingly, the sources hint that analysts may have
begun looking into the unfolding epidemic even earlier, given the timeline for
when the material crossed President Trump’s desk. By the time the agency’s
warnings made it into the President’s Daily Brief in early January, they would
have had to undergo “weeks of vetting and analysis.”
“The timeline of the intel side
of this may be further back than we’re discussing,” one source
told ABC, suggesting “preliminary reports from Wuhan” dated
back even earlier than the NCMI report, which was widely released among the
intelligence community before Thanksgiving and spawned several intel community
bulletins that supposedly outlined Beijing’s own responses to the growing
epidemic. China knew the coronavirus had gotten out of control, the sources
allege, but tried to keep it under wraps – a claim the Trump administration has
echoed repeatedly in the months since then.
The new revelations place the timeline for the virus’ origins much
closer to the controversial claims of Chinese foreign policy spokesman Lijian
Zhao, who claimed last month (albeit without real evidence) that the US
military had brought the virus to Wuhan when they sent a delegation to the Military
World Games in mid-October.
The Trump administration has been slammed for dragging its feet in
response to the coronavirus epidemic, playing down the potential disruption the
disease would cause even as it upended China’s economy and forced millions into
quarantine. While the president insisted “no one could have known” the
virus would wreak such havoc in the US, there’s no way the Trump administration
could not have seen the information in the NCMI report, former
deputy assistant defense secretary Mick Mulroy told ABC, claiming “it
would be a significant alarm that would have been set off” and “literally
every intelligence-collection agency” would have gotten involved in
following up and responding to the threat.
But Defense Secretary Mark Esper told the outlet he was unaware of the
issue coming before the National Security Council in November or December. No
official response was forthcoming from the administration until Trump closed
the border to flights from China in late January – all the while insisting
there was nothing to worry about (and, if insider stock sales by multiple
senators were any indication, telling Congress something different). Worse, not
only had multiple government agencies conducted several pandemic “war
games” in the months leading up to the outbreak, but they had
performed poorly, making many of the same missteps that they would faithfully
repeat in real life.
The administration also had China’s example to learn from, regarding the
importance of early testing and the futility of ‘shutting the barn door’
(locking down large segments of the population) after the horse was gone (after
the disease had already spread all over the country). As a result, the US
economy lies in ruins and millions of Americans are out of work – and the
nation still has the highest infection numbers in the world, dwindling medical
supply stockpiles, and no hope of getting back to work any time soon.
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