The COVID-19 “lab leak theory” is gaining renewed attention after the U.S. Department of Energy reportedly concluded that a lab was most likely the source of the deadly pandemic.
The news comes from officials who revealed to the Wall Street Journal that the department had made a “low confidence” assessment in support of the theory, which claims that SARS-CoV-2 — the pathogen responsible for the disease — had escaped from the Wuhan Institute of Virology (WIV). The site is designated with biosafety level 4, the highest security level required to isolate dangerous biological agents in an enclosed facility.
Intelligence assessments are typically made with low, medium or high confidence. Low confidence suggests that the reviewed information may be lacking, not reliable enough or perhaps too fragmented for a definitive judgment, according to CNN.
The intelligence community has been divided over the matter since President Joe Biden ordered a 90-day investigation into the virus’ origins in mid-2021.
Four agencies had low confidence that the virus originated in nature, while one agency — the FBI — had moderate confidence that it came from a lab incident.
Analysts from three other agencies were unable to coalesce around either explanation without additional information. Yet the community as a whole reported that SARS-CoV-2 “was not developed as a biological weapon” and that Chinese officials “did not have foreknowledge of the virus” before the outbreak began.
The Energy Department was initially among the undecided agencies. It reportedly shared its information with other agencies, but none changed their conclusions.
Republicans have prioritized studying the lab leak theory through a congressional subcommittee, which is slated to convene its first hearings on threats posed by the Chinese Communist Party on Tuesday.
Rep. Mike Gallagher (R, WI-8), a former Marine counterintelligence officer, will chair the committee, which he said would…
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