Is China
Being Set-Up?
Is China Being
Set-Up?
DARPA’s Hand
Seems to be in this
BATS,
GENE EDITING AND BIOWEAPONS: RECENT DARPA EXPERIMENTS RAISE CONCERNS AMID
CORONAVIRUS OUTBREAK
30 JAN 2020 POSTED BY WHITNEY WEB
DARPA
RECENTLY SPENT MILLIONS ON RESEARCH INVOLVING BATS AND CORONAVIRUSES, AS WELL
AS GENE EDITING “BIOWEAPONS” PRIOR TO THE RECENT CORONAVIRUS OUTBREAK. NOW,
“STRATEGIC ALLIES” OF THE AGENCY HAVE BEEN CHOSEN TO DEVELOP A GENETIC
MATERIAL-BASED VACCINE TO HALT THE POTENTIAL EPIDEMIC.
WASHINGTON
D.C. – In recent weeks, concern over the emergence of a novel
coronavirus in China has grown exponentially as media, experts and government
officials around the world have openly worried that this new disease has the
potential to develop into a global pandemic.
As
concerns about the future of the ongoing outbreak have grown, so too have the
number of theories speculating about the outbreak’s origin, many of which blame
a variety of state actors and/or controversial billionaires. This has
inevitably led to efforts to clamp down on “misinformation” related to the
coronavirus outbreak from both mainstream media outlets and major social media
platforms.
However,
while many of these theories are clearly speculative, there is also verifiable
evidence regarding the recent interest of one controversial U.S. government
agency in novel coronaviruses, specifically those transmitted from bats to
humans. That agency, the Pentagon’s Defense Advanced Research Project Agency
(DARPA), began spending millions on such research in 2018 and some of those
Pentagon-funded studies were conducted at known U.S. military bioweapons labs
bordering China and resulted in the discovery of dozens of new coronavirus
strains as recently as last April. Furthermore, the ties of the Pentagon’s main
biodefense lab to a virology institute in Wuhan, China — where the current
outbreak is believed to have begun — have been unreported in English language
media thus far.
While
it remains entirely unknown as to what caused the outbreak, the details of
DARPA’s and the Pentagon’s recent experimentation are clearly in the public
interest, especially considering that the very companies recently chosen to
develop a vaccine to combat the coronavirus outbreak are themselves strategic
allies of DARPA. Not only that, but these DARPA-backed companies are developing
controversial DNA and mRNA vaccines for this particular coronavirus strain, a
category of vaccine that has never previously been approved for human use in
the United States.
Yet,
as fears of the pandemic potential of coronavirus grow, these vaccines are set
to be rushed to market for public use, making it important for the public to be
aware of DARPA’s recent experiments on coronaviruses, bats and gene editing
technologies and their broader implications.
EXAMINING
THE RECENT WUHAN-BIOWEAPON NARRATIVE
As
the coronavirus outbreak has come to dominate headlines in recent weeks,
several media outlets have promoted claims that the reported epicenter of the
outbreak in Wuhan, China was also the site of laboratories allegedly linked to
a Chinese government biowarfare program.
However,
upon further examination of the sourcing for this serious claim, these supposed
links between the outbreak and an alleged Chinese bioweapons program have come
from two highly dubious sources.
For
instance, the first outlet to report on this claim was Radio Free Asia,
the U.S.-government funded media outlet targeting Asian audiences that used to
be run covertly by the CIA and named by the New York Times as
a key part in the agency’s “worldwide propaganda network.” Though it is no longer
run directly by the CIA, it is now managed by the government-funded
Broadcasting Board of Governors (BBG), which answers directly to Secretary of
State Mike Pompeo, who was CIA director immediately prior to his current post
at the head of the State Department.
In
other words, Radio Free Asia and other BBG-managed media
outlets are legal outlets for U.S. government propaganda. Notably, the
long-standing ban on the domestic use of U.S. government propaganda on U.S.
citizens was lifted in 2013, with the official
justification of allowing the government to “effectively communicate in a
credible way” and to better combat “al-Qaeda’s and other violent extremists’
influence.”
Returning
to the subject at hand, Radio Free Asia’s recent report on the
alleged origins of the outbreak being linked to a Chinese state-linked virology
center cited only Ren Ruihong, the former head of the medical assistance
department at the Chinese Red Cross, for that claim. Ruihong has been cited as an expert in several Radio
Free Asia reports on disease outbreaks in China, but has not been
cited as an expert by any other English-language media outlet.
“It’s a new type of mutant
coronavirus.They haven’t made public the genetic sequence, because it is highly
contagious…Genetic engineering technology has gotten to such a point now, and
Wuhan is home to a viral research center that is under the aegis of the China
Academy of Sciences, which is the highest level of research facility in China.”
Though
Ruihong did not directly say that the Chinese government was making a bioweapon
at the Wuhan facility, she did imply that genetic experiments at the facility
may have resulted in the creation of this new “mutant coronavirus” at the
center of the outbreak.
With Radio
Free Asia and its single source having speculated about Chinese
government links to the creation of the new coronavirus, the Washington
Times soon took it much farther in a report titled “Virus-hit Wuhan has two laboratories
linked to Chinese bio-warfare program.” That article, much
like Radio Free Asia’s earlier report, cites a single source for
that claim, former Israeli military intelligence biowarfare specialist Dany
Shoham.
Yet,
upon reading the article, Shoham does not even directly make the claim cited in
the article’s headline, as he only told the Washington Times that:
“Certain laboratories in the [Wuhan] institute have probably been
engaged, in terms of research and development, in Chinese [biological
weapons], at least collaterally, yet not as a principal
facility of the Chinese BW alignment (emphasis added).”
While
Shoham’s claims are clearly speculative, it is telling that the Washington
Times would bother to cite him at all, especially given the key role
he played in promoting false claims that the 2001 Anthrax attacks was the work of
Iraq’s Saddam Hussein. Shoham’s assertions about Iraq’s government and
weaponized Anthrax, which were used to bolster the case for the
2003 invasion of Iraq, have since been proven completely false, as Iraq
was found to have neither the chemical or biological “weapons of mass
destruction” that “experts” like Shoham had claimed.
Beyond
Shoham’s own history of making suspect claims, it is also worth noting that
Shoham’s previous employer, Israeli military intelligence, has a troubling past
with bioweapons. For instance, in the late 1990s, it was reported by several outlets that Israel was in
the process of developing a genetic bioweapon that would target Arabs,
specifically Iraqis, but leave Israeli Jews unaffected.
Given
the dubious past of Shoham and the clearly speculative nature of both his
claims and those made in the Radio Free Asia report, one
passage in the Washington Times article is particularly
telling about why these claims have recently surfaced:
“One ominous sign, said a
U.S. official, is that the false rumors since the outbreak began several weeks
ago have begun circulating on the Chinese Internet claiming the virus
is part of a U.S. conspiracy to spread germ weapons. That could
indicate China is preparing propaganda outlets to counter future charges the
new virus escaped from one of Wuhan’s civilian or defense research laboratories (emphasis
added).”
However,
as seen in that very article, accusations that the coronavirus escaped from a
Chinese-state-linked laboratory is hardly a future charge as
both the Washington Times and Radio Free Asia have
already been making that claim. Instead, what this passage suggests is that the
reports in both Radio Free Asia and the Washington
Times were responses to the claims circulating within China that the
outbreak is linked to a “U.S. conspiracy to spread germ weapons.”
Though
most English-language media outlets to date have not examined such a
possibility, there is considerable supporting evidence that deserves to be
examined. For instance, not only was the U.S. military, including its
controversial research arm — the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency
(DARPA), recently funding studies in and near China that discovered new, mutant
coronaviruses originating from bats, but the Pentagon also became recently
concerned about the potential use of bats as bioweapons.
BATS
AS BIOWEAPONS
In
addition, one preliminary study on the coronavirus
responsible for the current outbreak found that the receptor,
Angiotensin-converting enzyme 2 (ACE2), is not only the same as that used by
the SARS coronavirus, but that East Asians present a much higher ratio of lung
cells that express that receptor than the other ethnicities (Caucasian and
African-American) included in the study. However, such findings are preliminary
and the sample size is too small to draw any definitive conclusions from that
preliminary data.
Two
years ago, media reports began discussing the
Pentagon’s sudden concern that bats could be used as biological weapons, particularly
in spreading coronaviruses and other deadly diseases. The Washington
Post asserted that the Pentagon’s interest in investigating the
potential use of bats to spread weaponized and deadly diseases was because of
alleged Russian efforts to do the same. However, those claims regarding this
Russian interest in using bats as bioweapons date back to the 1980s when the
Soviet Union engaged in covert research involving the Marburg virus, research
that did not even involve bats and which ended with
the Soviet Union’s collapse in 1991.
Like
much of the Pentagon’s controversial research programs, the bats as bioweapons
research has been framed as defensive, despite the fact that no
imminent threat involving bat-propagated bioweapons has been acknowledged.
However, independent scientists have recently accused the Pentagon,
particularly its research arm DARPA, of claiming to be engaged in research it
says is “defensive” but is actually “offensive.”
The
most recent example of this involved DARPA’s “Insect Allies” program, which officially “aims to
protect the U.S. agricultural food supply by delivering protective genes to
plants via insects, which are responsible for the transmission of most plant
viruses” and to ensure “food security in the event of a major threat,”
according to both DARPA and media reports.
However,
a group of well-respected, independent scientists revealed in a scathing analysis of the program that,
far from a “defensive” research project, the Insect Allies program was aimed at
creating and delivering “new class of biological weapon.” The scientists, writing in the journal Science and led by Richard
Guy Reeves, from the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Biology in Germany,
warned that DARPA’s program — which uses insects as the vehicle for as
horizontal environmental genetic alteration agents (HEGAAS) — revealed “an
intention to develop a means of delivery of HEGAAs for offensive
purposes (emphasis added).”
Whatever
the real motivation behind the Pentagon’s sudden and recent concern about bats
being used as a vehicle for bioweapons, the U.S. military has spent millions of
dollars over the past several years funding research on bats, the deadly
viruses they can harbor — including coronaviruses — and how those viruses are
transmitted from bats to humans.
For
instance, DARPA spent $10 million on one project in 2018 “to unravel
the complex causes of bat-borne viruses that have recently made the jump to
humans, causing concern among global health officials.” Another research
project backed by both DARPA and NIH saw researchers at
Colorado State University examine the coronavirus that causes Middle East
Respiratory Syndrome (MERS) in bats and camels “to understand the role of these
hosts in transmitting disease to humans.” Other U.S. military-funded studies,
discussed in detail later in this report, discovered several new strains of
novel coronaviruses carried by bats, both within China and in countries
bordering China.
Many
of these recent research projects are related to DARPA’s Preventing Emerging Pathogenic Threats,
or PREEMPT program, which was officially announced in April 2018.
PREEMPT focuses specifically on animal reservoirs of disease, specifically
bats, and DARPA even noted in its press release in the program that it “is
aware of biosafety and biosecurity sensitivities that could arise” due to the
nature of the research.
DARPA’s
announcement for PREEMPT came just a few months after the U.S. government
decided to controversially end a moratorium on so-called “gain-of-function”
studies involving dangerous pathogens. VICE News explained “gain-of-function”
studies as follows:
“Known as ‘gain-of-function’
studies, this type of research is ostensibly about trying to stay one step
ahead of nature. By making super-viruses that are more pathogenic and
easily transmissible, scientists are able to study the way these viruses
may evolve and how genetic changes affect the way a virus interacts with its
host. Using this information, the scientists can try to pre-empt the
natural emergence of these traits by developing antiviral medications that are
capable of staving off a pandemic (emphasis added).”
It
is also important to point out the fact that the U.S. military’s key
laboratories involving the study of deadly pathogens, including coronaviruses,
Ebola and others, was suddenly shut down last July after the Center for Disease
Control and Prevention (CDC) identified major “biosafety lapses” at the
facility.
The
U.S. Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases (USAMRIID) facility
at Fort Detrick, Maryland — the U.S. military’s lead laboratory for “biological
defense” research since the late 1960s — was forced to halt all research it was conducting
with a series of deadly pathogens after the CDC found that it lacked
“sufficient systems in place to decontaminate wastewater” from its
highest-security labs and failure of staff to follow safety procedures, among
other lapses. The facility contains both level 3 and level 4 biosafety labs.
While it is unknown if experiments involving coronaviruses were ongoing at the
time, USAMRIID has recently been involved in research borne out
of the Pentagon’s recent concern about the use of bats as bioweapons.
The
decision to shut down USAMRIID garnered surprisingly little media coverage, as
did the CDC’s surprising decision to allow the troubled
facility to “partially resume” research late last November even though the
facility was and is still not at “full
operational capability.” The USAMRIID’s problematic record of safety at
such facilities is of particular concern in light of the recent coronavirus
outbreak in China. As this report will soon reveal, this is because USAMRIID
has a decades-old and close partnership with the University of Wuhan’s
Institute of Medical Virology, which is located in the epicenter of the current
outbreak.
THE
PENTAGON IN WUHAN?
Beyond
the U.S. military’s recent expenditures on and interest in the use of bats of
bioweapons, it is also worth examining the recent studies the military has
funded regarding bats and “novel coronaviruses,” such as that behind the recent
outbreak, that have taken place within or in close proximity to China.
The
authors of the study also sequenced the complete genomes for two of those
strains and also noted that existing MERS vaccines would be ineffective in
targeting these viruses, leading them to suggest that one should be developed
in advance. This did not occur.
Another
U.S. government-funded study that discovered still more new strains of “novel
bat coronavirus” was published just last year. Titled “Discovery and Characterization of Novel Bat
Coronavirus Lineages from Kazakhstan,” focused on “the bat
fauna of central Asia, which link China to eastern Europe” and the novel bat
coronavirus lineages discovered during the study were found to be “closely
related to bat coronaviruses from China, France, Spain, and South Africa,
suggesting that co-circulation of coronaviruses is common in multiple bat
species with overlapping geographical distributions.” In other words, the
coronaviruses discovered in this study were identified in bat populations that
migrate between China and Kazakhstan, among other countries, and is closely
related to bat coronaviruses in several countries, including China.
The
study was entirely funded by the U.S.
Department of Defense, specifically the Defense Threat Reduction Agency (DTRA)
as part of a project investigating coronaviruses similar to MERS, such as the
aforementioned 2018 study. Yet, beyond the funding of this 2019 study, the
institutions involved in conducting this study are also worth noting given
their own close ties to the U.S. military and government.
The
study’s authors are affiliated with either the Kazakhstan-based Research
Institute for Biological Safety Problems and/or Duke University. The Research
Institute for Biological Safety Problems, though officially a part of
Kazakhstan’s National Center for Biotechnology, has received millions from the U.S.
government, most of it coming from the Pentagon’s Cooperative Threat Reduction Program. It is the Kazakhstan
government’s official depository of “highly dangerous
animal and bird infections, with a collection of 278 pathogenic strains of 46
infectious diseases.” It is part of a network of Pentagon-funded
“bioweapons labs” throughout the Central Asian country, which
borders both of the U.S.’ top rival states — China and Russia.
Duke
University is also jointly partnered with China’s Wuhan
University, which is based in the city where the current coronavirus outbreak
began, which resulted in the opening of the China-based Duke Kunshan University
(DKU) in 2018. Notably, China’s Wuhan University — in addition to its
partnership with Duke — also includes a multi-lab Institute of Medical Virology
that has worked closely with the US Army Medical Research Institute for
Infectious Diseases since the 1980s, according to its website. As previously noted, the
USAMRIID facility in the U.S. was shut down last July for failures to abide by
biosafety and proper waste disposal procedures, but was allowed to partially
resume some experiments late last November.
THE
PENTAGON’S DARK HISTORY OF GERM WARFARE
The
U.S. military has a troubling past of having used disease as a weapon during
times of war. One example involved the U.S.’ use of germ warfare during the
Korean War, when it targeted both North Korea and China by dropping diseased
insects and voles carrying a variety of pathogens — including bubonic plague
and hemorrhagic fever — from planes in the middle of the night. Despite the
mountain of evidence and the testimony of U.S. soldiers involved in that
program, the U.S. government and military denied the claims and ordered the
destruction of relevant documentation.
In
the post World War II era, other examples of U.S. research aimed at developing
biological weapons have emerged, some of which have recently received media
attention. One such example occurred this past July, when the U.S. House of
Representatives demanded information from the U.S.
military on its past efforts to weaponize insects and Lyme disease between 1950
and 1975.
The
U.S. has claimed that it has not pursued offensive biological weapons since
1969 and this has been further supported by the U.S.’ ratification of the Biological Weapons Convention (BWC), which went
into effect in 1975. However, there is extensive evidence that the U.S. has
continued to covertly research and develop such weapons in the years since,
much of it conducted abroad and outsourced to private companies, yet still
funded by the U.S. military. Several investigators, including Dilyana
Gaytandzhieva, have documented how the U.S. produces
deadly viruses, bacteria and other toxins at facilities outside of the U.S. —
many of them in Eastern Europe, Africa and South Asia — in clear violation of
the BWC.
Aside
from the military’s own research, the controversial neoconservative think tank,
the now defunct Project for a New American Century (PNAC),
openly promoted the use of a race-specific genetically modified bioweapon as a
“politically useful tool.” In what is arguably the think tank’s most
controversial document, titled “Rebuilding America’s Defenses,” there are a few passages
that openly discuss the utility of bioweapons, including the following
sentences:
“…combat likely will take
place in new dimensions: in space, “cyber-space,” and perhaps the world of
microbes…advanced forms of biological warfare that can “target” specific
genotypes may transform biological warfare from the realm of terror to a
politically useful tool.”
Though
numerous members of PNAC were prominent in the George W. Bush administration,
many of its more controversial members have again risen to political prominence
in the Trump administration.
“The JASON group, composed
of academic scientists, served as technical advisers to the U. S. government.
Their study generated six broad classes of genetically engineered pathogens
that could pose serious threats to society. These include but are not
limited to binary biological weapons, designer genes, gene therapy as a weapon,
stealth viruses, host-swapping diseases, and designer diseases (emphasis
added).”
Concerns
about Pentagon experiments with biological weapons have garnered renewed media
attention, particularly after it was revealed in 2017 that DARPA was the top funder of
the controversial “gene drive” technology, which has the power to permanently
alter the genetics of entire populations while targeting others for extinction.
At least two of DARPA’s studies using this controversial technology were
classified and “focused on the potential military application of gene drive
technology and use of gene drives in agriculture,” according to media reports.
The
revelation came after an organization called the ETC Group obtained over 1,000
emails on the military’s interest in the technology as part of a Freedom of
Information Act (FOIA) request. Co-director of the ETC Group Jim Thomas said that this technology may
be used as a biological weapon:
“Gene drives are a powerful
and dangerous new technology and potential biological weapons could have
disastrous impacts on peace, food security and the environment, especially if
misused, The fact that gene drive development is now being primarily funded and
structured by the US military raises alarming questions about this entire
field.”
Though
the exact motivation behind the military’s interest in such technology is
unknown, the Pentagon has been open about the fact that it is devoting much of
its resources towards the containment of what it considers the two greatest threats to U.S. military
hegemony: Russia and China. China has been cited as the greatest threat of the
two by several Pentagon officials, including John Rood, the Pentagon’s top
adviser for defense policy, who described China as the greatest
threat to “our way of life in the United States” at the Aspen Security Forum
last July.
Since
the Pentagon began “redesigning” its policies and research
towards a “long war” with Russia and China,
the Russian military has accused the U.S. military
of harvesting DNA from Russians as part of a covert
bioweapon program, a charge that the Pentagon has adamantly denied. Major General
Igor Kirillov, the head of the Russian military’s radiation, chemical and
biological protection unit who made these claims, also asserted that the U.S.
was developing such weapons in close proximity to Russian and Chinese
borders.
China
has also accused the U.S. military of harvesting DNA from Chinese citizens with
ill intentions, such as when 200,000 Chinese farmers were used in 12
genetic experiments without informed consent. Those experiments had been conducted by Harvard researchers
as part of a U.S. government-funded project.
DARPA
AND ITS PARTNERS CHOSEN TO DEVELOP CORONAVIRUS VACCINE
Last
Thursday, the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations (CEPI) announced
that it would fund three separate programs in order to promote the development
of a vaccine for the new coronavirus responsible for the current
outbreak.
CEPI
— which describes itself as “a partnership of public, private, philanthropic
and civil organizations that will finance and co-ordinate the development of
vaccines against high priority public health threats” — was founded in 2017 by
the governments of Norway and India along with the World Economic Forum and the
Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. Its massive funding and close connections to
public, private and non-profit organizations have positioned it to be able to
finance the rapid creation of vaccines and widely distribute them.
CEPI’s
recent announcement revealed that it would fund two pharmaceutical companies —
Inovio Pharmaceuticals and Moderna Inc. — as well as Australia’s University of
Queensland, which became a partner of CEPI early last
year. Notably, the two pharmaceutical companies chosen have close ties to
and/or strategic partnerships with DARPA and are developing vaccines that
controversially involve genetic material and/or gene editing. The University of
Queensland also has ties to DARPA, but those ties are not related to the
university’s biotechnology research, but instead engineering and missile development.
For
instance, the top funders of Inovio Pharmaceuticals include both DARPA and the
Pentagon’s Defense Threat Reduction Agency (DTRA) and the company has
received millions in dollars in grants from DARPA, including a $45 million grant to develop a vaccine
for Ebola. Inovio specializes in the creation of DNA immunotherapies and DNA
vaccines, which contain genetically engineered DNA that causes the cells of the
recipient to produce an antigen and can permanently alter a person’s DNA.
Inovio previously developed a DNA vaccine for the Zika virus, but — to date —
no DNA vaccine has been approved for use in humans in the United States. Inovio
was also recently awarded over $8 millionfrom the U.S. military to
develop a small, portable intradermal device for delivering DNA vaccines
jointly developed by Inovio and USAMRIID.
However,
the CEPI grant to combat coronavirus may change that, as it specifically funds
Inovio’s efforts to continue developing its DNA vaccine for the coronavirus
that causes MERS. Inovio’s MERS vaccine program began in 2018 in partnership with
CEPI in a deal worth $56 million. The vaccine currently under
development uses “Inovio’s DNA
Medicines platform to deliver optimized synthetic antigenic genes into cells,
where they are translated into protein antigens that activate an individual’s
immune system” and the program is partnered with U.S. Army Medical Research
Institute of Infectious Diseases (USAMRIID) and the NIH, among others. That
program is currently undergoing testing in the Middle East.
Inovio’s
collaboration with the U.S. military in regards to DNA vaccines is nothing new,
as their past efforts to develop a DNA vaccine for both Ebola and Marburg virus
were also part of what Inovio’s CEO Dr. Joseph Kim called its “active
biodefense program” that has “garnered multiple grants from the Department of
Defense, Defense Threat Reduction Agency (DTRA), National Institute of Allergy
and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), and other government agencies.”
CEPI’s
interest in increasing its support to this MERS-specific program seems at odds
with its claim that doing so will combat the current coronavirus outbreak,
since MERS and the novel coronavirus in question are not analogous and treatments
for certain coronaviruses have been shown to be ineffectiveagainst other strains.
It
is also worth noting that Inovio Pharmaceuticals was the only company selected
by CEPI with direct access to the Chinese pharmaceutical market through its partnership with China’s
ApolloBio Corp., which currently has an exclusive license to sell
Inovio-made DNA immunotherapy products to Chinese customers.
The
second pharmaceutical company that was selected by CEPI to develop a vaccine for
the new coronavirus is Moderna Inc., which will develop a vaccine for the novel
coronavirus of concern in collaboration with the U.S. NIH and which will be
funded entirely by CEPI. The vaccine in question, as opposed to Inovio’s DNA
vaccine, will be a messenger RNA (mRNA) vaccine. Though different than a DNA
vaccine, mRNA vaccines still use genetic material “to direct the body’s cells
to produce intracellular, membrane or secreted proteins.”
Moderna’s
mRNA treatments, including its mRNA vaccines, were largely developed
using a $25 million grant from DARPA and it
often touts is strategic alliance with DARPA in press releases. Moderna’s past and
ongoing research efforts have included developing mRNA
vaccines tailored to an individual’s unique DNA as well as an unsuccessful
effort to create a mRNA vaccine for the Zika Virus, which was funded by the
U.S. government.
Both
DNA and mRNA vaccines involve the introduction of foreign and engineered
genetic material into a person’s cells and past studies have found that such vaccines
“possess significant unpredictability and a number of inherent harmful
potential hazards” and that “there is inadequate knowledge to define either the
probability of unintended events or the consequences of genetic modifications.”
Nonetheless, the climate of fear surrounding the coronavirus outbreak could be
enough for the public and private sector to develop and distribute such
controversial treatments due to fear about the epidemic potential of the
current outbreak.
However,
the therapies being developed by Inovio, Modern and the University of
Queensland are in alignment with DARPA’s objectives regarding gene editing and
vaccine technology. For instance, in 2015, DARPA geneticist Col. Daniel
Wattendorf described how the agency was
investigating a “new method of vaccine production [that] would involve giving
the body instructions for making certain antibodies. Because the body would be
its own bioreactor, the vaccine could be produced much faster than traditional
methods and the result would be a higher level of protection.”
According
to media reports on Wattendorf’s
statements at the time, the vaccine would be developed as follows:
“Scientists would harvest
viral antibodies from someone who has recovered from a disease such as flu or
Ebola. After testing the antibodies’ ability to neutralize viruses in a petri
dish, they would isolate the most effective one, determine the genes needed to
make that antibody, and then encode many copies of those genes into a circular
snippet of genetic material — either DNA or RNA, that the person’s body would
then use as a cookbook to assemble the antibody.”
Though
Wattendorf asserted that the effects of those vaccines wouldn’t be permanent,
DARPA has since been promoting permanent gene modifications as a means of
protecting U.S. troops from biological weapons and infectious disease. “Why is
DARPA doing this? [To] protect a soldier on the battlefield from chemical
weapons and biological weapons by controlling their genome — having the genome
produce proteins that would automatically protect the soldier from the inside
out,” then-DARPA director Steve Walker (now with Lockheed Martin) said this past September of the project, known
as “Safe Genes.”
CONCLUSION
Research
conducted by the Pentagon, and DARPA specifically, has continually raised
concerns, not just in the field of bioweapons and biotechnology, but also in
the fields of nanotechnology, robotics and several others. DARPA, for instance,
has been developing a series of unsettling research projects that ranges
from microchips that can create and
delete memories from the human brain to voting machine software that is rife with
problems.
Now,
as fear regarding the current coronavirus outbreak begins to peak, companies
with direct ties to DARPA have been tasked with developing its vaccine, the
long-term human and environmental impacts of which are unknown and will remain
unknown by the time the vaccine is expected to go to market in a few weeks
time.
Furthermore,
DARPA and the Pentagon’s past history with bioweapons and their more recent
experiments on genetic alteration and extinction technologies as well as bats
and coronaviruses in proximity to China have been largely left out of the
narrative, despite the information being publicly available. Also left out of
the media narrative have been the direct ties of both the USAMRIID and
DARPA-partnered Duke University to the city of Wuhan, including its Institute
of Medical Virology.
Though
much about the origins of the coronavirus outbreak remains unknown, the U.S.
military’s ties to the aforementioned research studies and research
institutions are worth detailing as such research — while justified in the name
of “national security” — has the frightening potential to result in unintended,
yet world-altering consequences. The lack of transparency about this research,
such as DARPA’s decision to classify its controversial genetic extinction
research and the technology’s use as a weapon of war, compounds these concerns.
While it is important to avoid reckless speculation as much as possible, it is
the opinion of this author that the information in this report is in the public
interest and that readers should use this information to reach their own
conclusions about the topics discussed herein.
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