https://www.latimes.com/business/story/2021-06-03/lab-leak-covid-origin

Column: The lab-leak origin claim for COVID-19 is in the news, but it’s still 
fact-free
By Michael HiltzikBusiness Columnist 
June 3, 2021 12:53 PM PT
A corollary to the scientific truism that “nature abhors a vacuum” is that 
nature tends to fill the void with any garbage near at hand. 

For example, consider the surge of interest in the claim that the coronavirus 
reached the outside world through a release — accidental or deliberate — from a 
virus laboratory in Wuhan, China.

The “lab leak hypothesis,” as it’s known to virologists, is experiencing a 
heyday. Long dismissed by many experts, it’s now being taken more seriously as 
one of two general possibilities for COVID-19’s origin, along with the theory 
that the virus reached humans through contact with animal hosts. 

Follow the animals. That’s where we’re going to find the origin of COVID-19.

Tulane virologist Robert F. Garry

In a May 14 letter in the magazine Science, 18 eminent experts urged that “a 
transparent, objective, data-driven” investigation be undertaken of both 
theories to achieve “greater clarity about the origins of this pandemic.” Their 
letter was directed to the World Health Organization, which in April labeled 
the laboratory origin of COVID-19 “extremely unlikely.”

Further, President Biden on May 26 gave federal intelligence agencies 90 days 
to provide him “the most up-to-date analysis of the origins of COVID-19, 
including whether it emerged from human contact with an infected animal or from 
a laboratory accident.”

The new speculation about the origins of COVID-19 has caused some stock-taking 
by the press, which is accused of ridiculing the lab-leak theory in all its 
manifestations during 2020 merely because it was promoted by President Trump. 

That’s treated as another strike against the “liberal media” supposedly 
marching in lock-step to disdain conservatives. The mainstream press, wrote 
Jonathan Chait of New York Magazine, “took Donald Trump’s bait, answering the 
former president’s dissembling with false certainty of their own.”

What’s missing from all this reexamination and soul-searching is a fundamental 
fact: There is no evidence — not a smidgen — for the claim that COVID-19 
originated in a laboratory in China or anywhere else, or that the China lab 
ever had the virus in its inventory. There’s even less for the wildest version 
of the claim, which is that the virus was deliberately engineered. There never 
has been, and there isn’t now. 

No one disputes that a lab leak is possible. Viruses have escaped from 
laboratories in the past, on occasion leading to human infection. But 
“zoonotic” transfers — that is, from animals to humans — are a much more common 
and well-documented pathway.

That’s why the virological community believes that it’s vastly more likely that 
COVID-19 spilled over from an animal host to humans. 

That was the conclusion reached in a seminal paper on COVID-19’s origins 
published in Nature in February 2020 by American, British and Australian 
virologists. “We do not believe that any type of laboratory-based scenario is 
plausible,” they wrote.

“We cannot prove that SARS-CoV-2 [the COVID-19 virus] has a natural origin and 
we cannot prove that its emergence was not the result of a lab leak,” the lead 
author of the Nature paper, Kristian Andersen of the Scripps Research Institute 
in La Jolla, told me by email. 

“However, while both scenarios are possible, they are not equally likely,” 
Andersen said. “Precedence, data, and other evidence strongly favor natural 
emergence as a highly likely scientific theory for the emergence of SARS-CoV-2, 
while the lab leak remains a speculative incomplete hypothesis with no credible 
evidence.”

Co-author Robert F. Garry of Tulane Medical School told several colleagues 
during a recent webcast: “Our conclusion that it didn’t leak from the lab is 
even stronger today than it was when we wrote the paper.”

As the veteran pseudoscience debunker David Gorski sums up the contest between 
the lab-leak and zoonotic theories, “the likelihood of the two hypotheses is 
nowhere near close to equal.”

What remains of the lab-leak theory is half-truths, misrepresentations, and 
tendentious conjecture. 

Consider one trigger of heightened speculation, a May 23 article in the Wall 
Street Journal reporting that three researchers at the Wuhan Institute of 
Virology, which is located in the community where the first major outbreak was 
identified, became sick enough in the fall of 2019 to seek hospital treatment. 
That was months before the start of the pandemic.

Yet the report offered no evidence linking the patients’ illness to COVID-19 
research at the Wuhan lab. The report said the researchers had “symptoms 
consistent with both Covid-19 and common seasonal illness.” Well, yes: The 
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention advises that the symptoms of COVID 
and seasonal flu resemble each other.

There’s no evidence that the three researchers had contracted COVID-19 as 
opposed to flu or any other virus. Nor is there information about the clinical 
outcome of these three cases, which might tell us more.

Virologists point out, moreover, that it would be unlikely for COVID to affect 
only three people seriously enough to warrant hospital care without infecting 
hundreds of others in the lab or their households. The other victims might have 
had milder symptoms, but an outbreak of that magnitude would have been 
difficult to keep under wraps.

As for the letter in Science, some of its 18 signatories have taken pains to 
emphasize that they are not endorsing the lab-leak theory; some are highly 
skeptical of the hypothesis. 

The organizer of the letter, David Relman of Stanford, told Nature’s Amy 
Maxmen, “I am not saying I believe the virus came from a laboratory.” Another 
signatory, Ralph S. Baric of the University of North Carolina told the New 
Yorker, “The genetic sequence for SARS-CoV-2 really points to a natural-origin 
event from wildlife.” 

Their goal in signing the letter, they said, was not to point fingers at the 
Wuhan lab, but to urge WHO to devote more effort to determining the origin, 
whatever it might be, before expressing a categorical opinion. 

Biden’s directive to the intelligence agencies has been taken as a virtual 
endorsement of the laboratory origin claim. For example, the Financial Times 
headlined its report on the directive, “How Biden came around to the lab-leak 
theory.”

Even a cursory reading of the directive shows that Biden didn’t “come around” 
to the lab-leak theory. His directive is resolutely neutral about COVID-s 
origin; it’s consistent with interest in a conclusion that the virus originated 
in a lab, but also with a desire to put that speculation to rest.

Let’s take a look at the science underlying the search for COVID’s origins. One 
important fact is that we may never get a definitive answer. The animal source 
of the Ebola virus, which was first identified 45 years ago, is still unknown, 
science writer Amy Maxmen reported in Nature. 

Maxmen noted that it took researchers 14 years to trace the 2002-2004 outbreak 
of severe acute respiratory syndrome, or SARS, to a virus that leapt from bats 
to humans. 

But the history of virological outbreaks points strongly toward a “zoonotic” 
transfer of the COVID-19 virus — that is, from animals to humans.

“There is an extensive history of pathogen emergence by natural means: most 
novel viral pathogens that have caused epidemics or pandemics in the human 
population have emerged naturally from a wildlife reservoir,” Angela Rasmussen 
of the Center for Global Health Science and Security at Georgetown University 
wrote in January. 

“The overwhelming conclusion is that this virus, too, found its way into a 
human host through a series of unhappy accidental encounters with animals,” 
Rasmussen observed.

The virus that causes COVID-19, moreover, is known as an opportunistic virus 
that has little trouble passing among species — “pantropic,” in virological 
jargon.

For a laboratory leak to have occurred secretly or inadvertently, would require 
“a massive conspiracy and cover-up involving a lot of people, including some 
very accomplished scientists, not telling the truth about what they were 
working on or what they had,” Garry told me.

The lab-leak theory gains from a superficial plausibility — especially to 
laypersons. The Wuhan lab had a collection of bat viruses, including some that 
appear to be similar to the coronavirus that causes COVID-19.

But some virologists say they’re not similar enough to mutate into SARS-CoV-2, 
even through deliberate manipulation, Garry says. “That’s a point that’s not 
going to resonate very strongly with people who haven’t studied viruses for a 
long, long time.”

The assertion that the press was too quick to disdain the lab-leak theory 
because it was touted by ideologically suspect sources — Trump and senators Tom 
Cotton and Rand Paul, among others — overlooks a few pertinent factors.

One is that these individuals were not merely ideologically suspect, but known 
promoters of falsehoods. It would have been unwise and imprudent to suddenly 
treat them as truth-tellers, especially since their lies had often been 
targeted at China for political reasons. The idea that China had concealed its 
labs’ role in the pandemic dovetailed well with policies aimed at painting 
China as an untrustworthy economic and political actor.

Trump administration officials, such as David Asher, who conducted an inquiry 
on COVID-19’s origins for former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, have been 
pushing the report of the three sick Wuhan researchers. 

Asher is quoted in both the Wall Street Journal’s report and the Financial 
Times article on Biden’s directive, and has pushed the lab-leak theory on Fox 
News.

Another reason for journalistic skepticism was that many professional 
virologists labeled the lab-leak theory as implausible from the first. This was 
because the theory presupposed a complex series of events coming together just 
so — secrecy, coordination, even deliberate malevolence, abetted by extreme 
sloppiness.

Advocates of the lab-leak theory point to the location of the Wuhan institute 
of Virology, in the same community as the first known outbreak. But they 
overlook the magnitude of China’s trade in wildlife for food and traditional 
medicine, among other uses — including in and around Wuhan. 

As my colleague Alice Su reported last year, the breeding and sale of animals 
such as civet cats and pangolins, which are considered possible intermediary 
carriers of COVID-19 on its path from bats to humans, is a $73-billion industry 
in China.

That makes it even larger than the beef industry in the United States, which is 
valued at nearly $70 billion. Regulation of Chinese breeders and traders is 
light and rife with corruption.

Determining the origins of COVID-19 may not be important to address the current 
pandemic, which can only be done through public health stratagems. But it’s 
important for policies to deal with the next pandemics, since policies will be 
different for outbreaks that start with animal-human contacts and those 
originating in poor laboratory security.

There’s an argument for getting more accountability out of China about its 
handling of the viral outbreak in its earliest stages. But there’s also an 
argument against pointing fingers at the Chinese regime or its scientific 
establishment without evidence: China’s cooperation will be crucial for world 
health in the future, and it’s less likely to happen if China feels it has been 
unjustly blamed for COVID-19. 

“The lab-leak hypothesis is taking the oxygen out of what’s really needing to 
be done, which is cooperating with China,” Garry told his colleagues on the 
recent webcast. 

“Follow the animals,” he said. “That’s where we’re going to find the origin of 
COVID-19.”


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