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US government backed shock Wuhan lab plan to collect 500,000 viruses months before Covid… and KNEW it was dangerous

The new docs point to biosafety lapses by the US government - just months before the Covid pandemic

THE US government backed a risky virus-hunting project led by the Wuhan lab at the centre of the Covid origins debate, The Sun can reveal.

The Global Virome Project - a pitch to collect every virus in the world led by Wuhan Institute of Virology's "Batwoman" and New York-based EcoHealth Alliance - had allies in the US government, new documents show.

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Security guards keeping watch outside the Wuhan Institute of Virology during a visit from the World Health Organisation in 2021Credit: Reuters
Peter Daszak from New York-based EcoHealth Alliance, pictured in 2021, worked closely with Wuhan Institute of VirologyCredit: AFP
Former US Ambassador Terry Branstad - pictured with Chinese president Xi Jinping - signed a cable endorsing a virus-hunting project involving the Wuhan labCredit: Getty - Pool

EcoHealth Alliance, whose mission is to prevent pandemics, has been under fire since the early days of the pandemic over its bat coronavirus research at the Wuhan lab.

The group has faced scrutiny over whether Covid may have emerged from research at the lab that was funded by the US government.

One of their projects, the Global Virome Project, aimed to collect nearly every unknown virus in the world with the potential to infect humans - thought to be 500,000 or more.

Co-led by EcoHealth Alliance's Peter Daszak and Wuhan Institute of Virology's Shi Zhengli, they planned to work with labs across the world on the ambitious 10-year project at a cost of $3billion.

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China's biggest genome sequencing company - which has ties to the Chinese military and is now blacklisted by the Pentagon - was set to be a collaborator.

And China’s Academy of Military Medical Sciences was also on board.

Now, new documents - obtained by US Right to Know - show that the US government backed the controversial virus-hunting project.

Records show how the US State Department and USAID helped get it off the ground from 2016 to 2019.

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They show that the US forged ahead despite unanswered questions around who would own the data - and whether the Chinese partners would be transparent.

The documents also show the government knew the project could be a national security risk.

" seen by the State Department warned that a lack of "US leadership" meant the Chinese government "could take a leading position".

The document is dated May 20, 2019 - just months before the first cases of Covid began circulating in Wuhan.

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And it warned that "limited access to the information... may have serious national security implications".

A comment on the draft pitch states that "an equivalent statement will be inserted into the Chinese doc".

In other words, US institutions, such as EcoHealth Alliance, were told that China going ahead with the project could be a national security risk to America.

And at the same time, Chinese institutions were told that the US going ahead with the project would pose a security risk to China.

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