That question during the Trump Administration prompted cries of right-wing crackpottery. But new politics brings new attitudes, which may also yield a truth more complicated, and harder to swallow, than Wuhan lab escape.
The funding, leadership, news, and research publication trail leads to a disturbing conclusion: equal, if not greater, American culpability for the global outbreak.
China Carolina virus? Research that made news nearly six years ago implicates the Wuhan Virology Institute and the lesser-known
Baric Laboratory at the University of North Carolina (UNC). The Baric lab's
2015 Nature Medicine paper -- a seminal treatise on manmade Covid -- prompted dire warnings about a lab escape, ensuing pandemic, and the questionable wisdom of engineering virulent pathogens.
Named for an epidemiologist considered one of the world's top coronavirus experts --
Ralph S. Baric, Ph.D. -- the Baric Lab led a 15-person team that
engineered a virus virtually identical to Covid. In scientific terms, Baric's group combined the "SHC014 surface protein" -- Covid's familiar spikes -- with "the HL-SARS backbone," the round viral core, to make a pathogen known as a "chimera".
The new virus "grew as well in human cells" as the virus that causes Sudden Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS). It also "resisted all vaccines and immunotherapy," Baric told
Vice Magazine technology reporter Melissa Cronin in 2015.
Numerically, Baric's team included
a super majority of American support: ten UNC scientists, as well as researchers from the US National Center for Toxicological Research; the
Food and Drug Administration; the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute; and
Harvard Medical School.
Virologists studying avian (bird) flu self-imposed a gain-of-function (GOF) research moratorium that predated the
2014 US government version. GOF research studies how viruses "gain" a new function, or ability, ostensibly for treatment or vaccine possibilities. Once exclusive to bats, for instance, the SARS coronavirus Baric and team created
gained the ability to infect humans.
The self-imposed GOF moratorium did little to quell the quest to engineer deadly pathogens, lamented Pasteur Institute microbiologist
Simon Wain-Hobson, Ph.D., among the first scientists to express alarm over GOF's pandemic potential.
"Rather than use the avian flu moratorium to seek advice, listen and foster debate, many influenza scientists engaged in an academic exercise of
self-justification," Wain-Hobson, then chair of the Foundation for Vaccine Research in Washington, DC,
explained in a remarkably-prescient 2013 Nature editorial. "It is too easy for scientists in a field to dismiss criticism and ideas from outside."
So easy that within two months of lifting the bird flu research moratorium, researchers were
"at it again," he noted.
German, Swiss, and Dutch scientists were trying to transform bird flu, bat flu, and a flu-like disease of dogs -- canine distemper -- into new types of human flu.
A "heated" and well-publicized controversy erupted over this work that prompted the US government toward "new guidelines for the review, regulation and oversight of GOF research," Wain-Hobson explained.
Among the new guidelines: the 2014 Federal GOF funding moratorium, one of the "chill winds" Wain-Hobson expected to "blow from policy-makers" at researchers who "need to learn lessons from the past."
Five questionsTo learn those lessons,
Wain-Hobson in his 2013 editorial urged governments, funders, and regulators to answer five questions that could have been a Covid 2020 crystal ball.
1) "Is the virological basis for the work sound?" Will Mother Nature create the dangerous virus at some point in the evolutionary cycle, or will it arise solely from human manipulations using "artificial-selection systems"? If Mother Nature won't create a deadly virus, why create it at all?
2) "Who makes the rules and provides oversight? Barely a sound has emerged at the international level," Wain-Hobson exclaimed. "The World Health Organization" -- which later investigated and exhonerated Wuhan -- "has held closed-door meetings and
singularly failed to widen the debate."
3) "
What if these groups generate a highly pathogenic and transmissible virus?" Wain-Hobson predicted such a thing "within two years."
4) "What if there were a leak or a small outbreak?" Wain-Hobson warned of"crippling lawsuits" and wondered if GOF researchers and their institutions were "sufficiently covered with insurance.
"Are university regents or chancellors even aware of the power, and dangers, of the modern molecular biology going on in their labs?" he asked.
5) "
Is it appropriate for civilian scientists to make microbes more dangerous?" American culpability for the current catastrophe also comes into play here, as what Wain-Hobson called a "failure of duty on the part of funders and regulators."
Until these critical questions were answered, Wain-Hobson urged the suspension of "all virological GOF work." Virologists, he said, need to "engage in public discussion of their work and the issues it raises."