The Defender Children’s Health Defense News and Views
Close menu
Close menu

You must be a CHD Insider to save this article Sign Up

Already an Insider? Log in

February 23, 2023 COVID Views

COVID

Fauci Publicly Dismissed Concerns About U.S. Ties to Wuhan Lab — But Privately He Worried, Emails Suggest

Emails obtained through the Freedom of Information Act suggest Dr. Anthony Fauci did not disclose the depth of his concerns about the National Institutes of Health funding gain-of-function research conducted by U.S. virologist Ralph Baric at the Wuhan Institute of Virology.

As the COVID-19 pandemic emerged, Anthony Fauci met with a U.S. collaborator of the Wuhan Institute of Virology (WIV) about his gain-of-function research, emails obtained through Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests suggest.

On Feb. 11, 2020, Fauci met with U.S. virologist Ralph Baric, according to a copy of his schedule.

Baric, a professor in the departments of epidemiology and microbiology of the University of North Carolina, has come under scrutiny for sharing reverse genetics techniques, mice engineered to exhibit human airway cells and possibly a risky research proposal with WIV senior scientist Zhengli Shi.

A newly unearthed email — a notification revealing the private Slack chat between two virologists close to Baric — provides a glimpse into what Fauci and Baric discussed.

“I talked to Ralph for a long time last night, [h]e sounds beat,” wrote Matt Frieman, a University of Maryland professor in the Department of Microbiology and Immunology on Feb. 18, 2020. “He said he sat in Fauci’s office talking about the outbreak and chimeras.”

A term adopted from ancient mythology, a “chimera” in virology is a hybrid virus generated by joining fragments from two or more viruses.

Baric responded seriously when Frieman mentioned the WIV, according to the Slack message.

“I joked about his link to WIV, he wasn’t very amused,” Frieman continued.

Credit: Department of Education

To be sure, Fauci may have sought Baric’s advice in those early days in part because of his preeminence in coronavirus research.

In virology circles, Baric was “the big cheese” in coronaviruses, Frieman said in a 2015 media article.

Fauci, who recently retired as head of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), was already meeting frequently with the White House as it formulated a response to the emerging outbreak.

However, other emails lay out the nature of Fauci’s most pressing interest in Baric’s work the week prior to their meeting.

Together the emails suggest Fauci has not disclosed the depth of his concerns about the Wuhan lab and its connection to the research enterprise he steered for decades.

Fauci was alerted in late January 2020 that the genome of SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, betrayed signs of engineering.

A small group of virologists circulated a paper coauthored by Baric and Shi describing a SARS-CoV experiment that employed engineering.

Fauci immediately dispatched an aide to interrogate whether his institute, the NIAID, had any connection to the study. He attached the file under a shorthand name: “SARS Gain of function.”

Credit: White Coat Waste Project

NIAID had indeed supported Baric’s studies with the WIV. It had also funded similar work through EcoHealth Alliance, a U.S. nonprofit.

Some of the experiments sponsored by EcoHealth Alliance, which does not have labs of its own, occurred at a BSL-3 or BSL-2 level at the Wuhan lab complex, which had a history of biosafety challenges.

Baric himself has called for an interrogation of a possible lab origin of COVID-19, alluding to the work conducted in BSL-2, according to a report by MIT Technology Review.

Credit: White Coat Waste Project

Other emails demonstrate that during a private teleconference that shaped the small group of virologists’ early efforts to grapple with the lab leak theory, and ultimately publicly rejects it, Baric’s work was discussed in depth.

But Baric was excluded from the discussion because of his ties to the lab. Ten days later, Fauci met directly with Baric.

Frieman, Baric and NIAID did not respond to requests for comment from U.S. Right to Know.

Zhengli Shi ‘may be arrested’

The Slack discussion also may offer insight into discussions between Baric and Shi in those critical early days.

“Zhi’s [sic] paper was not approved by the Chinese govt and that she may be arrested for it,” Frieman said in the Slack message, reporting back from his discussion with Baric. “Thats not a good look for anyone.”

The paper is not named.

Shi would email Baric a few weeks later, in April 2020, to complain about the scrutiny their gain-of-function collaboration had attracted, including in the U.S. press.

Credit: University of North Carolina

“I have been blamed by the peoples from the beginning of the outbreak because of this paper,” she said.

The emails in this story have been obtained from the Texas Public Information Act, North Carolina Public Records Law and the FOIA. The requests were submitted by U.S. Right to Know (USRTK), BuzzFeed, Judicial Watch, Open The Books and White Coat Waste Project. U.S. Department of Education documents reported on in this story, which USRTK obtained via FOIA litigation, can be found here.

The University of North Carolina documents reported on in this story that USRTK obtained via FOIA litigation can be found here.

The full documents obtained via all agencies and institutions can be found here.

Originally published by U.S. Right to Know.

Suggest A Correction

Share Options

Close menu

Republish Article

Please use the HTML above to republish this article. It is pre-formatted to follow our republication guidelines. Among other things, these require that the article not be edited; that the author’s byline is included; and that The Defender is clearly credited as the original source.

Please visit our full guidelines for more information. By republishing this article, you agree to these terms.

Woman drinking coffee looking at phone

Join hundreds of thousands of subscribers who rely on The Defender for their daily dose of critical analysis and accurate, nonpartisan reporting on Big Pharma, Big Food, Big Chemical, Big Energy, and Big Tech and
their impact on children’s health and the environment.

  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
  • This field is hidden when viewing the form
  • This field is hidden when viewing the form
    MM slash DD slash YYYY
  • This field is hidden when viewing the form