How To Neutralize The Campus Communists
Democrats Are Getting Desperate, Now Is The Time To Twist The Knife
National Insecurity, Courtesy of Joe Biden
America’s Accountability Crisis
The Most Important Date In American History
A 'Never Again Trump' Guide To Voting Trump
Eurovision: The silent Majority and the Vocal Minority
Biden’s Middle Eastern Foreign Policy Blunders
Unbridled Corruption of the Iranian Regime
This is How We Will Have to Fight Cheating in the 2024 Election
Traitor Joe's
Joe Biden Mother’s Day Message Sparks Outrage
Florida Proves It Doesn't Mess Around After 'Queers for Palestine' Block Entrance to...
Four Honduran Illegals Caught Selling Enough Fentanyl to Kill 1.6 Million Americans
Biden Admin Is Reportedly Bribing Israel to Not Invade Rafah
Tipsheet

60 Minutes Attempts to Walk Back Doubts Over Covid Lab Leak Theory

AP Photo/Ng Han Guan

The long-established, once viewed as credible journalism CBS News program, 60 Minutes, attempted to clear the air about the origins of COVID-19 after a year of declaring the lab-leak theory "debunked."

Advertisement

After FBI Director Christopher Wray agreed with the bombshell report by the Washington Street Journal, revealing that the United States Department of Energy concluded that COVID "most likely arose from a laboratory leak," 60 Minutes is walking back their previous comments about the matter. 

In May 2020, CBS News's Scott Pelley cast significant doubt over the Trump Administration's assertions that the virus was leaked from a lab in Wuhan, China saying, "both the White House and the Chinese Communist Party have been less than honest."

Alternatively, Pelley pushed the idea that the virus emerged from a wet market with Peter Daszak, president of the group EcoHealth Alliance, "confirming" this theory. 

"There is zero evidence that his virus came out of a lab in China," Daszak said.

"Does the Wuhan Institute of Virology, to your knowledge, have this virus in its inventory?" Pelley asked. 

"No," Daszak firmly responded. "The closest known relative is one that's different enough that it is not SARS-CoV 2, so there's just no evidence that anybody had it in the lab anywhere in the world before the outbreak." 

At the time, EcoHealth Alliance was receiving government funding from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and has worked with the Wuhan Institute of Virology (WIV). Daszak, an anti-believer of the lab leak theory, praised the company's work as being "critical." 

Advertisement

Pelley criticized the Trump Administration for suspending EcoHealth's funding, claiming it was because of a "political disinformation campaign targeting China's Wuhan Institute." 

"As the U.S. led the world in illness and death, the [Trump] White House moved the focus to the Chinese government," Pelley told viewers then. "Last Sunday, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo attempted to resurrect a debunked theory that the virus was man-made in China… However, the administration has offered no evidence of an accident or genetic engineering."

In March 2021, Daszak continued to put down the lab leak theory saying it is "extremely unlikely," even after Pelley's colleague Lesley Stahl posed calling the lab leak a "leading theory."

However, Jamie Metzl, a former Clinton administration official and an adviser to the World Health Organization (WHO), put Daszak's claims to bed, saying that the virus did come from the Wuhan lab, criticizing him for defending China. 

Well, what else can we do?" Daszak pushed back after Stahl didn't question the theory. "There's a limit to what you can do, and we went right up to that limit. We asked them tough questions. They weren't vetted in advance, and the answers they gave we found to be believable, correct, and convincing."

Advertisement

"But weren't the Chinese engaged in a cover-up?" Stahl asked. "They destroyed evidence; they punished scientists trying to give evidence on this question of the origin."

"Well, that wasn't a task to find out if China covered up the origin issue. We didn't see any evidence of any false reporting or cover-up in the work that we did in China. There were Ministry of Foreign Affairs staff in the room throughout our stay, absolutely. They were there to make sure everything went smoothly from the China side," Daszak said.

"Or to make sure they weren't telling you the whole truth and nothing but the truth," Stahl responded. 

"You sit in a room with people who are scientists, and you know what a scientific statement is, and you know what a political statement is. We had no problem distinguishing between the two," Daszak said.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement