Three questions investigators must ask about Trump’s response to COVID-19

Investigators of the government's response to COVID-19 can start by asking three questions

Published April 8, 2020 6:30AM (EDT)

US President Donald Trump and other members of the task force listen as National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases Director, Dr. Anthony Fauci, speaks during the daily briefing on the novel coronavirus, COVID-19, at the White House on March 21, 2020, in Washington, DC.  (JIM WATSON/AFP via Getty Images)
US President Donald Trump and other members of the task force listen as National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases Director, Dr. Anthony Fauci, speaks during the daily briefing on the novel coronavirus, COVID-19, at the White House on March 21, 2020, in Washington, DC. (JIM WATSON/AFP via Getty Images)

This article was produced by the Deep State, a project of the Independent Media Institute.

In the aftermath of the 9/11 attacks, President George Bush stoutly resisted the creation of a commission to investigate how the hijackers were able to penetrate America's defenses. Only the congressional intelligence committees should investigate, Bush said, and only behind closed doors. Vice President Cheney added that anyone who charged the attacks on New York and Washington represented an intelligence failure were "irresponsible."

So we can expect President Trump, allies, cronies, and trolls to resist Rep. Adam's Schiff's call for the creation of a 9/11 style national commission to investigate the U.S. government's response to the contagious virus outbreak that first emanated from China last December.

Others say rebuking China is more urgent. John Bolton, Twitter addict and unemployed geopolitical provocateur, prefers the United States to take punitive action toward China for Beijing's bungled response. The problem isn't China, chimes in Josh Rogin of the Washington Post, it's the "Chinese Communist Party Virus."

There's no contradiction, however, between holding the governments in Beijing and Washington accountable, as National Memo's Joe Conason notes.

A serious investigation of the pandemic, its origins and its almost unimpeded swath of destruction would begin by identifying the actual source of the disease and examining how the virus jumped into the human population. Such an investigation would necessarily examine the Chinese government's responsibility in having concealed the outbreak at the very beginning, when it might have been eradicated at relatively little cost.

And then the investigation would probe Washington's ruinous neglect of the pandemic threat as it loomed over this country.

At home, investigators of the government's response to COVID-19 can start by asking three questions.

1. Who set priorities at the Office of Director of National Intelligence?

The ODNI was created after 9/11 precisely to create a body of intelligence analysts with a broader view of national security than that of any one agency. To its credit, ODNI identified the danger of pandemic in its 2019 threat assessment.

We assess that the United States and the world will remain vulnerable to the next flu pandemic or large-scale outbreak of a contagious disease that could lead to massive rates of death and disability, severely affect the world economy, strain international resources, and increase calls on the United States for support. Although the international community has made tenuous improvements to global health security, these gains may be inadequate to address the challenge of what we anticipate will be more frequent outbreaks of infectious diseases because of rapid unplanned urbanization, prolonged humanitarian crises, human incursion into previously unsettled land, expansion of international travel and trade, and regional climate change.

This warning is spot on, but it came halfway through a 42-page catalog of dangers facing the United States. For ODNI, the threat of pandemic ranked lower on the list than the dangers posed by Salvadoran street gangs and war in outer space.

On a group call with reporters, I asked former Homeland Security chief Michael Chertoff if ODNI's buried finding represented an intelligence failure. He dodged the question by saying, "There's always the issue of what the consumer [meaning the rest of the government and the White House] want to hear."

In other words, the rest of the government wanted to hear about Venezuela and Trump's Space Command, so ODNI put pandemics far down the list of threats. That's an admission that the U.S. intelligence community, which prides itself on "speaking truth to power," chose not to do so in this case.

In the mental universe of ODNI, the threat of pandemic threat was slightly less important than the threat of MS-13. One can debate whether racism affected ODNI's judgment but one cannot debate that its warning was little help to policymakers or the American people.

The intelligence community is disturbed because Richard Grenell, a lightly qualified former press spokesman, now serves as Acting DNI. He is indeed a hack. But Grenell was not responsible for ODNI's faulty priorities. Dan Coats, the previous DNI, was. He needs to testify.

2. What did John Bolton do to dismantle our pandemic defenses?

A second failure of intelligence occurred at the National Security Council. In May 2018, National Security Adviser John Bolton "streamlined" the NSC's Directorate for Global Health Security and Biodefense right out of existence. The directorate had been created by the Obama administration after the Ebola scare of 2014, in which the deadly wasting disease ravaged Africa. This hub of expertise and institutional memory was dispersed, as its last director wrote in the Washington Post.

Bolton saw a greater threat to the American people emanating from the impoverished government of Venezuela. He elevated "regime change" over "Global Health Security." Bolton's explanation for his foolish re-organization needs to be heard, preferably under oath.

3. Why didn't the Defense Department's medical intelligence office take the lead?

Another node of failure was the National Center for Medical Intelligence (NCMI), which operates as part of the Defense Intelligence Agency. The story comes from former U.S military intelligence officer Scott Ritter, writing in The American Conservative.

The mission of the NCMI is to serve as the lead activity within the Department of Defense (DoD) "for the production of medical intelligence," and to prepare and coordinate "integrated, all-source intelligence for the DoD and other government and international organizations on foreign health threats and other medical issues."

The office had proven its value before, Ritter writes.

…[I]n April 2009—two months prior to when the WHO and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) officially declared the global outbreak of H1N1 influenza a pandemicNCMI published an intelligence product, known as an "Infectious Disease Risk Assessment," which predicted that a recent outbreak of the Swine Flu (H1N1) would become a pandemic.

The coronavirus was clearly part of the NCMI's remit, he notes

And yet its first Infectious Disease Risk Assessment for COVID-19 was issued on January 5, 2020, reporting that 59 people had been taken ill in Wuhan, China. This report was derived not from any sensitive intelligence collection effort or independent biosurveillance activity, but rather from a report issued to the WHO by the Wuhan Municipal Health Commission, dated January 5, 2020.

The next day the CDC warned American citizens to take precautions if traveling to China, followed a day later with the activation of a COVID-19 incident management team within the CDC Emergency Management System.

Ritter doesn't point a finger at Trump. He asks how will NCMI improve its performance next time?

As President Trump noted on March 17, however, it would have been helpful to have had advance warning. That was the job of the NCMI, and they failed. This failure may have been a result of complacency, incompetence, or just a byproduct of circumstance. Regardless of the reason, the NCMI needs to learn from this experience, and reexamine the totality of the intelligence cycle—the direction, collection, analysis and feedback loop — associated with its failure to adequately predict the coronavirus pandemic.

And Ritter asks an epidemiological question: Did the virus originate in animals or in humans? Like many others, I have relied on multiple reports that the virus came from animals. However, Ritter notes:

that the Joint Field Epidemiology Investigation Team, a specialized task force working under the auspices of the Chinese Center for Disease Control (CCDC), found that the COVID-19 epidemic did not [emphasis added] originate by animal-to-human transmission in the Huanan Seafood Wholesale Market, as originally believed, but rather human-to-human transmission totally unrelated to the operation of the market.

The report is written by three Chinese doctors. Are they spinning the government's line? Or do they have science to support their finding? Where did the virus come from? That's one more question that needs to be answered by the COVID-19 investigation.


By Jefferson Morley

Jefferson Morley is a senior writing fellow and the editor and chief correspondent of the Deep State, a project of the Independent Media Institute. He has been a reporter and editor in Washington, D.C., since 1980. He spent 15 years as an editor and reporter at the Washington Post. He was a staff writer at Arms Control Today and Washington editor of Salon. He is the editor and co-founder of JFK Facts, a blog about the assassination of JFK. His latest book is The Ghost: The Secret Life of CIA Spymaster, James Jesus Angleton.

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