The US Energy Department’s conclusion, with “low
confidence,” that an accidental laboratory leak in China most likely caused the
coronavirus pandemic has renewed questions about what sparked the worst public
health crisis in a century — and whether the virus at the heart of it was
somehow connected to scientific research.
اضافة اعلان
Scientists and spy agencies have tried assiduously to answer
that question, but conclusive evidence is hard to come by. US intelligence
agencies are split, and none of them changed their conclusions after seeing the
Energy Department’s findings, officials said.
Scientists who have studied the genetics of the virus, and
the patterns by which it spread, say the most likely cause is that the virus
jumped from live mammals to humans — a scientific phenomenon known as “zoonotic
spillover” — at the Huanan Seafood Wholesale Market in Wuhan, China, the city
in which the first cases of COVID-19 emerged in late 2019.
But other scientists say there is evidence, albeit
circumstantial, that the virus came from a lab, possibly the Wuhan Institute of
Virology, which had deep expertise in researching coronaviruses. Lab accidents
do happen; in 2014, after accidents involving bird flu and anthrax, the Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention tightened its biosafety practices.
The debate is politically fraught. The lab leak theory
gained currency among Republicans in the spring of 2020 after former President
Donald Trump, who used inflammatory terms to blame China for the pandemic,
latched onto the idea. Many Democrats have not been persuaded by the lab leak
hypothesis; some say they believe the explanation of natural causes, and others
say there may never be enough intelligence to draw a conclusion.
The Energy Department’s findings have given a boost to House
Republicans, who are investigating the pandemic’s origins. But apart from the
politics, experts say that understanding what caused a public health crisis
that has killed nearly 7 million people could help researchers understand how
to prevent the next one.
Here is what we know, and do not know, about the origins of
the coronavirus.
Why is it hard to know for certain how the pandemic started?It is often difficult to find the origins of viruses, but
China has compounded that problem by making it very difficult to gather
evidence.
By the time Chinese researchers arrived to collect samples
from the Huanan market, police had shut down and disinfected the market because
a number of people linked to it had become sick with what would later be
recognized as COVID. No live market animals were left.
Some scientists also believe that China has provided an
incomplete picture of early COVID cases. And they worry that a directive to
hospitals early in the outbreak to report illnesses specifically linked to the
market may have led doctors to overlook other cases with no such ties, creating
a biased snapshot of the spread.
What have scientists done to investigate?Experts have tried to work around the holes in the data.
Scientists have examined cases of patients hospitalized before
the call went out for doctors to look for ties to the market. They have also
mapped the locations of early COVID cases in Wuhan — including both people who
were initially linked to the market and those who were not — and found what
they say are signs that the virus started spreading at the market.
Some of those same scientists have studied maps of where
investigators found the virus in the Huanan market, including walls, floors, and
other surfaces, and found that those samples clustered in an area of the market
where live animals were sold.
And separate genetic analyses from the very early stages of
the pandemic, some scientists have said, suggest that the virus spilled over
into people working or shopping at the market on two separate occasions.
But other scientists say there is evidence, albeit circumstantial, that the virus came from a lab, possibly the Wuhan Institute of Virology, which had deep expertise in researching coronaviruses.
Other scientists have disputed that studies like those can
indicate a market origin with much confidence. They have said, for example,
that the evidence for two separate spillovers at the market could also be
evidence of the virus evolving as it spread from person to person.
Some have also argued that for all the attention being paid
to the Wuhan Institute of Virology, not enough has been paid to a different
research site in the city, the Wuhan Center for Disease Control and Prevention.
That center is much closer to the Huanan market.
Why do some people suspect a laboratory leak?In October, Republicans on the Senate health committee
published an analysis of the origins of the pandemic that argued it was “most
likely the result of a research-related incident,” while acknowledging that the
conclusion was “not intended to be dispositive.”
The report spotlighted what its authors described as holes
in the natural origins theory, as well as “persistent biosafety problems” at
the Wuhan Institute of Virology. The report, though, relied largely on existing
public evidence, rather than new or classified information, and did not produce
evidence to show that the Wuhan institute stored any virus in its collections
that could have become the virus causing COVID-19, with or without scientific
tinkering.
The lab leak hypothesis is bolstered, the report said, by
the absence of any published evidence that SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes
COVID-19, was circulating in animals before the pandemic. Samples of virus
collected on refrigerators, countertops, and other surfaces at the Huanan
market were genetically similar to human samples, suggesting the virus was shed
by humans, not animals, it said.
But some experts said the inability to find an infected animal
did not prove anything, because China shut down the market and killed all of
its animals before they could be tested.
In 2018, before the pandemic, the Wuhan institute and its
partners — including EcoHealth Alliance, a research group whose work has been
financed by the US — sought Defense Department funding to collect and
experiment on coronaviruses with novel traits that would make them highly
transmissible in humans.
The group project was never funded. But the report pointed
to that proposal, noting that the virus that causes COVID-19 has traits similar
to what the researchers were looking for. That has persuaded some scientists
that a lab leak was possible. The Senate Republicans report surmised that the
virus may have escaped — perhaps by infecting a researcher who then carried it
outside the lab.
What does the US intelligence community say?In May 2021, several months after he took office, President
Joe Biden ordered the US intelligence agencies to conduct a 90-day inquiry into
the cause of the pandemic. The findings of that review were released in August
2021 and reaffirmed what the agencies had previously said: Both the natural
origins theory and the lab leak theory were plausible.
In a statement at the time, Biden called on China to be more
transparent about what had led to the emergence of the virus there in late
2019.
The US Energy Department’s new conclusion is based on
intelligence that is not publicly available, so it is difficult to know what
accounted for the change. But the department’s use of the phrase “low confidence”
indicates that its level of certainty is not high. The FBI, however, has
concluded with “moderate confidence” that the virus emerged accidentally from a
lab.
Four other intelligence agencies and the National
Intelligence Council have concluded, with low confidence, that the virus most
likely emerged through natural transmission. The CIA, the nation’s preeminent
spy agency, has not taken a position and remains undecided.
Read more Health
Jordan News