US shared ‘gobsmacking’ Covid lab leak file with UK

us shared ‘gobsmacking’ covid lab leak file with uk

Security personnel gather near the entrance of the Wuhan Institute of Virology during a visit by the World Health Organization team – NG HAN GUAN/AP

The US shared “gobsmacking” evidence with Britain at the height of the Covid pandemic suggesting a “high likelihood” that the virus had leaked from a Chinese lab, The Telegraph can reveal.

In January 2021, Five Eyes intelligence-sharing nations were convened to discuss the possibility of a lab leak as the US warned that China had covered up research on coronaviruses and military activity at a laboratory in Wuhan.

In a previously unreported phone call that month, Mike Pompeo, the former US secretary of state, presented evidence that supported the lab leak theory to Dominic Raab, then the Foreign Secretary, and representatives from Canada, New Zealand and Australia.

Speaking to The Telegraph, two Trump administration officials accused Mr Raab and the UK Government of ignoring the lab leak theory because of resistance from government scientists who supported the explanation that the virus had jumped between animals and humans.

Mr Pompeo presented a summary of classified American intelligence reports collected in the early days of the pandemic and compiled by the State Department. The intelligence reports themselves are understood to have been shared separately with the UK via the Five Eyes network between October and December 2020.

“We saw several pieces of information and thought that they were, frankly, gobsmacking,” said one former official who worked on the intelligence that informed Mr Pompeo’s report. “They obviously pointed to the high likelihood that this was indeed a lab leak.”

us shared ‘gobsmacking’ covid lab leak file with uk

Dominic Raab and Mike Pompeo, the then US secretary of state, in 2020 – Kirsty O’Connor/PA Archive

In one document, which has since been released by the State Department under Freedom of Information laws, US officials warned of “consistent stonewalling” by China after the virus was first discovered and accused local officials of “gross corruption and ineptitude”.

The research revealed for the first time that Chinese military officials had worked with the Wuhan Institute of Virology in the years leading up to the pandemic, and that some researchers at the lab had become ill shortly before the virus was first recorded nearby.

It also showed that Chinese scientists had carried out “gain of function” research at the institute, which has since become a key piece of evidence for the lab leak theory.

The theory has become a divisive topic among scientists and government officials in the years following the pandemic and has prompted two investigations by the World Health Organisation, which China has been accused of obstructing.

British government ministers including Boris Johnson initially dismissed the possibility that Covid had been created by scientists, arguing in June 2021 that “the advice that we have had is that it doesn’t look as though this particular disease of zoonotic origin came from a lab”.

Two former officials claimed the UK had ignored the evidence presented by the US because ministers saw the lab leak claims as a “radioactive American political issue” fuelled by public disagreement between government scientists and Donald Trump.

“Once the thing became fundamentally political, the ability to pursue it internationally really just collapsed because no one else was interested in touching it,” said one of the officials. “I think [Five Eyes] were kind of annoyed by the way the issue had become treated in US politics.”

Both separately named Sir Jeremy Farrar, a member of the Government’s Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies as one of the leading opponents of the lab leak theory within the British government.

A majority of scientific experts have long said that they believe an animal to human interaction was the most likely cause of the first infection.

However, some Government figures, including Michael Gove, have since said that they believe the virus was “man-made”.

In November, Mr Gove told the Covid Inquiry that there was a “significant body of judgment that believes that the virus itself was man-made – and that presents its own set of challenges”.

Both the FBI and US Department of Energy have said they believe a lab leak is the most likely cause of Covid, while other agencies have said they think it occurred naturally.

Joe Biden, the US president, has said he does not know where the virus started, while the US National Intelligence Council said last year it “probably emerged and infected humans through an initial small-scale exposure”.

UK ministers are now facing calls to expand the terms of the Covid Inquiry to include an investigation into the origin of the virus.

The Telegraph understands that the call in Jan 2021 was deliberately held on an “open line” without security encryption in the hope that Chinese intelligence agencies would hear that Western countries were aware of military activity in Wuhan.

“We did that deliberately…we wanted to put pressure on the bad guys,” said a State Department source.

Ten days after the call, in which officials said the UK was unwilling to assist with a US-led lab leak investigation or share its own research, the summary compiled by Mr Pompeo’s officials was released to the public in a “fact sheet”.

Those involved in the release said they took care to avoid revealing the sources or methods of US spy agencies, and that it was just the “tip of the iceberg” of the underlying intelligence that had been gathered.

A UK government spokesman said: “There are still questions that need to be answered about the origin and spread of Covid-19, not least so we can ensure we are better prepared for future pandemics.

“The UK continues to support the World Health Organisation in its expert study of the origins of Covid-19. It is important that China and other countries cooperate fully with the researchers.”

Play The Telegraph’s brilliant range of Puzzles – and feel brighter every day. Train your brain and boost your mood with PlusWord, the Mini Crossword, the fearsome Killer Sudoku and even the classic Cryptic Crossword.

OTHER NEWS

20 minutes ago

Video: THE CHIC LIST: Anyone for tennis looks with winning style?

20 minutes ago

Video: Mother, 29, gasps in fear when she realises the 'door is open' on a 36ft ferris wheel she is riding with her two-year-old son

20 minutes ago

Iowa superintendent and former Olympian bested in footrace by 5th grader

22 minutes ago

Panthers reach Eastern Conference finals for second straight year, eliminating Bruins in 6 games

22 minutes ago

Arsenal v Everton: Mikel Arteta press conference - part two

22 minutes ago

Nationwide doubles maximum personal loan to £50k amid rising building costs

22 minutes ago

Mikel Arteta confirms plan to hold talks over Arsenal future as contract expiry nears

22 minutes ago

Zayn Malik tells screaming fans ‘I’ve missed this’ during debut UK solo show

23 minutes ago

What life is like in the world's happiest country, from a 28-year-old who left the U.S. for Finland

25 minutes ago

Cape Town fishing boat sinks: 11 Fishermen missing, 9 rescued

25 minutes ago

Dolphins No.7 Katoa gets Bennett tick ahead of Tigers

25 minutes ago

Seven dead after powerful storms slam Houston, Texas

25 minutes ago

John Cleese says vertigo has made him terrified of using stairs

27 minutes ago

Pirates' Paul Skenes throws six no-hit innings in his second MLB start

29 minutes ago

Taylor Sheridan Says Farewell To Dabney Coleman, Explains Why He Gave Mentor Unforgettable Turn As Dutton Family Patriarch In ‘Yellowstone’

30 minutes ago

Signed napkin that secured Lionel Messi's move to Barcelona aged 13 is sold for £760,000 - more than DOUBLE its starting price

30 minutes ago

Laura Woods on covering Saudis shocking Messi at the World Cup and watching Keane and Souness go at it live on air as she reveals she will miss Tyson Fury vs Oleksandr Usyk after a freak holiday accident

30 minutes ago

Court orders Yair Netanyahu to post NIS 20,000 to cover journalist's legal expenses

30 minutes ago

‘Best president for gun owners’ Trump to address National Rifle Association

30 minutes ago

Councils hit back after drivers make cars 'invisible' to speed and bus lane cameras

30 minutes ago

Stormont leaders request for Rishi Sunak meeting yields nothing to date

31 minutes ago

‘It’s become innate to us’: The act of desperation that turned defeat into victory for thrill king Pies

31 minutes ago

Stocks have 5-10% more upside from here, says JPMorgan’s Jordan Jackson

31 minutes ago

Millions of people live in poverty in the UK – so why is it still so taboo?

31 minutes ago

KwaMashu football icon passes away after short illness

31 minutes ago

Cavin Johnson: Mood in the Kaizer Chiefs camp is positive

31 minutes ago

Up in smoke: Workers remove dozens of apparent marijuana plants from Wisconsin Capitol tulip garden

32 minutes ago

Ex-military surgeons embrace new mission: stop Americans from bleeding to death

32 minutes ago

Steve Wozniak: When I die, these are the moments I want to remember—they don't involve co-founding Apple

36 minutes ago

Cannes First Look: ‘Under the Stars' Starring Toni Collette and Andy Garcia

36 minutes ago

What went wrong for the Bruins and what comes next

36 minutes ago

Survey results: O’s fans see Kimbrel back as closer before too long

36 minutes ago

The AI revolution just took a big step forward

36 minutes ago

Haley protest votes raise red flags for Trump

36 minutes ago

Hapless Crusaders suffer first loss to Brumbies in 15 years

36 minutes ago

National landmarks show two views of American history. Which is yours?

37 minutes ago

Orioles legend Cal Ripken Jr. thinks Jackson Holliday may have needed more time in the minors

37 minutes ago

Simone Biles: What to know about US Olympic gold medal gymnast

37 minutes ago

US-based company innovates 'cutting-edge technology' to help improve military

37 minutes ago

Consumer ETFs showing the real inflation picture

Kênh khám phá trải nghiệm của giới trẻ, thế giới du lịch