Suspected
SARS virus and flu samples found in luggage: FBI report describes China's
'biosecurity risk' Yahoo 20200330
WASHINGTON — In late November 2018, just over a year before the first coronavirus
case was identified in Wuhan, China, U.S. Customs and Border Protection agents
at Detroit Metro Airport stopped a Chinese biologist with three vials labeled
“Antibodies” in his luggage.
The biologist told the agents that a colleague in China had asked him to
deliver the vials to a researcher at a U.S. institute. After examining the vials, however, customs
agents came to an alarming conclusion.
“Inspection of the writing on the vials and the stated recipient led
inspection personnel to believe the materials contained within the vials may be
viable Middle East Respiratory Syndrome (MERS) and Severe Acute Respiratory
Syndrome (SARS) materials,” says an unclassified FBI tactical intelligence
report obtained by Yahoo News.
The report, written by the Chemical and Biological Intelligence Unit of
the FBI’s Weapons of Mass Destruction Directorate (WMDD), does not give the
name of the Chinese scientist carrying the suspected SARS and MERS samples, or
the intended recipient in the U.S. But
the FBI concluded that the incident, and two other
cases cited in the report, were part of an alarming pattern.
“The Weapons of Mass Destruction Directorate assesses foreign scientific
researchers who transport undeclared and undocumented biological materials into
the United States in their personal carry-on and/or checked luggage almost certainly present a US biosecurity risk,”
reads the report. “The WMDD makes this
assessment with high confidence based on liaison reporting with direct access.”
The report, which came out more than two months before the World Health
Organization learned of a cluster of pneumonia cases in Wuhan that turned out
to be COVID-19, appears to be part of a larger FBI concern about China’s involvement with scientific research in the
U.S. While the report refers
broadly to foreign researchers, all three cases
cited involve Chinese nationals.
In the case of the suspected SARS and MERS vials, the intelligence report
cites another classified document that is marked “FISA,”
meaning it contains information collected under the
Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act. Another case cited in the report appeared to
involve flu strains, and a third was suspected E. coli.
The FBI does not state precisely what sort of biosecurity risk these
cases could present, but Raina MacIntyre, a professor of global biosecurity at
the University of New South Wales in Sydney, said the FBI appears to be
concerned with dual-use research that
would be used for bioterrorism. And
if the illicit samples cited in the report were being brought into the U.S.,
she says, the traffic is likely to be both ways.
“How do you know what they’re bringing in and out unless you have a
comprehensive surveillance point?” she asked. “If it’s going
one way, it’s going the other way. You’d
be very naive to assume otherwise.”
Retired Air Force Brig. Gen. Robert Spalding, who worked on China issues
on the National Security Council under the Trump administration, said “there is a threat” posed by Chinese nationals
carrying biological samples but believes it’s “likely the carrier ... would be
someone who is unwitting,” making it hard to determine the intent. “Some likely
could be deliberate, to test our ability to identify and intercept.
Others could be opportunistic,” he said.
The FBI report refers to both biosecurity, which typically refers to the
intentional misuse of pathogens, such as for bioterrorism, and biosafety, which covers accidental release. The FBI declined to comment on the report.
Concerns about Chinese biosafety are not new.
For example, the
SARS outbreak in 2003 was followed by several incidents of infections caused by
laboratory accidents, including eight cases that resulted from mishandling at the Chinese Institute of Virology in
Beijing.
“There have been cases in the past where a
variant of some kind of flu pandemic had escaped from a laboratory because of
mismanagement,” said Elsa Kania, an adjunct senior fellow at the Center
for a New American Security.
But the problem is not limited to Chinese
researchers, even if those cases have been prominent, she continued. “Certainly it is a biosecurity risk when
anyone is transporting materials in a manner that is clandestine because …
there have been several incidents when this has occurred with researchers of a
variety of nationalities.”
Concerns about China’s flouting of biosafety precautions may be
long-standing, but the coronavirus pandemic is likely to exacerbate tensions
between Beijing and Washington. The
outbreak comes amid already rising tensions in U.S.-China relations over issues
that range from trade to espionage.
Andrew Weber, who worked during the Obama administration as the assistant
secretary of defense for nuclear, chemical and biological defense programs,
said the relationship with China in the biological sciences has gotten worse in
recent years.
“After SARS, when China needed technical
help, it had a strong relationship with the [Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention]. They were
transparent, because they realized covering up
an outbreak cost them dearly,” said Weber, now a senior fellow at the
Council on Strategic Risks. “In recent years they’ve tightened up, making
international cooperation more difficult.”
In recent weeks, however, these tensions have rapidly boiled over, with
President Trump calling COVID-19 “the Chinese Virus,” while Beijing in turn has
promoted conspiracy theories claiming the virus originated in a U.S. weapons
lab.
Scientists have been adamant that the virus is not a weapon, either from
the United States or China. “There’s no
basis to suspect it’s a laboratory construct,” says Richard Ebright, a
professor of chemical biology at Rutgers University. “It has none of the
expected signatures that would be present for deliberate construction.”
However, Ebright doesn’t exclude the
possibility that the virus’s spread started from poor biosecurity in China.
A leading theory is that the virus
jumped from wildlife to humans. Some
researchers speculate this happened at a live-animal market where exotic
species are sold for food. But Ebright
also notes that such wildlife viruses are
collected in laboratories, including in Wuhan. “Therefore, it’s also a possibility that this
virus entered the human population through accidental infection of a lab worker
carrying out field collection, or an accident by a lab worker characterizing
the sample in a laboratory,” he said.
Independent of the coronavirus, the FBI’s
focus on China’s biosecurity appears to be part of long-standing suspicion in
the U.S. government about China’s involvement in the biological sciences.
Several recent high-profile Justice
Department cases involving the export of sensitive technology have involved
Chinese scientists, or persons with alleged ties to the Chinese government.
Most prominently, the Justice Department in January announced charges
against Charles Lieber, the chair of
Harvard’s department of chemistry and chemical biology, for concealing ties to
the Chinese government. “It’s a
clear-cut case of a conflict of interest, and unfortunately, it’s not an isolated incident,” said FBI special
agent Joseph R. Bonavolonta, head of the Boston field office, in announcing the
charges.
Lieber, who is free on a $1 million bond,
has not yet entered a plea on the charges.
But the FBI’s focus on China and Chinese scientists is also raising
concerns among some academics, who fear it smacks of profiling. “I am concerned
that the current trend in national security is toward profiling against people
of Chinese descent,” said Nicholas Evans, an assistant professor at the
University of Massachusetts Lowell who specializes in medical ethics. “That’s not only racist, it’s bad practice. FBI and other intelligence and law enforcement
attempts at profiling have very often been harmful without making us any
safer.”
Evans also questioned the FBI’s focus on scientists hand-carrying
biological samples as a unique threat.
He pointed to previous examples, like a
U.S. lab in Maine that was fined more than a decade ago for importing highly
pathogenic avian flu viruses from Saudi Arabia.
“The FBI claims that it is impossible to
determine the contents of samples accurately, even if declared under current
import laws,” he wrote in an email. “That’s true. But I am skeptical about the
degree to which this particular behavior adds significant risks to security
given that there are many other ways to get biological
organisms into the country.”
Yanzhong Huang, a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations, said
it’s true that China has long had loopholes in its biosafety regulations. “That’s why [Chinese President] Xi [Jinping] in February
talked about beefing up the legislation for biosafety and biosecurity,”
he said.
That history has already encouraged rumors like the idea that the
coronavirus originated as a bioweapon.
Now, with relations between China and the U.S. deteriorating, Huang
expects collaboration on biological research to grow even more difficult,
reversing decades of cooperation. “I
often argue that U.S. engagement with China is the most successful in the area
of public health,” he said. Such
cooperation even survived the difficult period after the 1989 Tiananmen Square
protests.
Now, however, those relations are being set
back as hostilities between the two countries grow.
“You could argue, health is borderless, especially when two countries
face these common challenges. This would
be a time for them to collaborate mostly closely,” he said. “That turned out to not be the case.”
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