It was amusing to watch
the emergence of this debate on the US-China stage. The Chinese were
understandably unwilling to be blamed for the emergence of a virus in which
they had no part, and thus reacted strongly to accusations the virus originated
in a Wuhan lab. The Americans proved to be even more terrified at the
possibility of scientific proof that the virus escaped from one of their
bio-labs, and resorted to the only weapon they had which was to turn up the
volume on blaming China. There were two
main reasons for this state of affairs:[1] The US was
the only country known to contain all the varieties that were being spread
worldwide.[2] The US is
the only nation in the world known to have repeatedly used biological weapons
on other countries, beginning with North Korea and never ceasing. Of even more
damning consequence is the known locations of about 400 American bio-weapons
labs spread throughout the world, to say nothing of the pathetically-lax institution
at Fort Detrick.[1][2][3]
Moreover, Trump recently claimed he could kill the entire
population of Afghanistan within days. “Afghanistan would be wiped off the face
of the Earth. It would be gone and this is not using nuclear. It would be over
in – literally, in 10 days.” Biological weapons would seem the only
alternative. Hemorrhagic Fever and Hantavirus worked for the US in North Korea;
perhaps also Afghanistan.[4][5][6] Mr. Trump
later denied intention to carry out his threat, but let’s dispense with the fiction of the US having no
biological weapons and that Fort Detrick and the 400 foreign labs are
performing only benevolent “peace medicine” functions. If it were China with
the above history and SARS, MERS, AIDS, EBOLA, bird
flu, swine flu, and COVID-19 first erupted in the US, the
Americans would claim this as 100% proof that China was responsible. It cannot
be a surprise that much of the world today is naturally tending to lay these
outbreaks at America’s doorstep.
But returning to our topic of man-made COVID-19 or COVID-20, it seems
everyone has been a little too eager to dismiss the possibility (or
probability) of these viruses having a (human) helping hand.
Dr. Mae-Wan Ho of
the Institute for Science in Society cites a Journal
of Virology report (Feb 2000)[7] that
described a method for inducing desired mutations into coronavirus to create
new viruses. “Manipulating viral genomes is now routine, and it is easy to
create new viruses that jump host species in the laboratory in the course of
apparently legitimate experiments in genetic engineering. It is not even
necessary to intentionally create lethal viruses, if one so wishes. It is
actually much faster and much more effective to let random recombination and
mutation take place in the test tube. Using a technique called ‘molecular
breeding’, millions of recombinants can be generated in a matter of minutes.
These can be screened for improved function in the case of enzymes, or
increased virulence, in the case of viruses and bacteria. In other words,
geneticists can now greatly speed up evolution in the laboratory to create
viruses and bacteria that never existed in all the billions of years of
evolution on earth.”[8] It wasn’t
widely publicised, but Dr. Ho called
for a full investigation into the possible genetic engineering and
dissemination of the SARS virus.[9]
Then another article in which
the author explained that scientists eager to dispel the notion of an
artificial origin, do so by pointing out that these new coronaviruses didn’t
reflect their computer simulations, the author stating, “To put it simply, the authors
are saying that SARS-CoV-2 was not deliberately engineered because if it were,
it would have been designed differently.” However, the London-based molecular
geneticist Dr Michael Antoniou commented
that this line of reasoning fails to take into account that there are a number
of laboratory-based systems that can select for high affinity RBD variants that
are able to take into account the complex environment of a living organism. “So
the fact that COVID-19 didn’t have the same RBD amino acid sequence as the one
that the computer program predicted in no way rules out the possibility that it
was genetically engineered.”[10]
The article further states
that “[The] authors of the Nature Medicine article
seem to assume that the only way to genetically engineer a virus is to take an
already known virus and then engineer it to have the new properties you want.
On this premise, they looked for evidence of an already known virus that could
have been used in the engineering of SARS-CoV-2. Since they failed to find that
evidence, they stated, “Genetic data irrefutably show that SARS-CoV-2 is not
derived from any previously used virus backbone.” But Dr Antoniou told us that while the authors did
indeed show that SARS-CoV-2 was unlikely to have been built by deliberate
genetic engineering from a previously used virus backbone, that’s not the only
way of constructing a virus. A well-known alternative process that could have
been used has the cumbersome name of “directed iterative evolutionary selection
process”. In this case, it would involve using genetic engineering to generate
a large number of randomly mutated versions of the SARS-CoV spike protein
receptor binding domain (RBD), which would
then be selected for strong binding to the ACE2 receptor and consequently high
infectivity of human cells.
“This selection can be done either with purified proteins or,
better still, with a mixture of whole coronavirus (CoV) preparations and human
cells in tissue culture. This preparation of phage, displaying on its surface a
“library” of CoV spike protein variants, is then added to human cells under
laboratory culture conditions in order to select for those that bind to the
ACE2 receptor. This process is repeated under more and more stringent binding
conditions until CoV spike protein variants with a high binding affinity are
isolated. Once any of the above selection procedures for high affinity
interaction of SARS-CoV spike protein with ACE2 has been completed, then whole
infectious CoV with these properties can be manufactured. Such a directed
iterative evolutionary selection process is a frequently used method in
laboratory research.”
There is, incidentally, another possible way that COVID-19 could have
been developed in a laboratory, but in this case without using genetic
engineering. This was pointed out by Nikolai Petrovsky, a
researcher at the College of Medicine and Public Health at Flinders University
in South Australia. Petrovsky says that coronaviruses can be cultured in lab
dishes with cells that have the human ACE2 receptor. Over
time, the virus will gain adaptations that let it efficiently bind to those
receptors. Along the way, that virus would pick up random genetic mutations
that pop up but don’t do anything noticeable. “The result of these experiments is a virus that is highly virulent
in humans but is sufficiently different that it no longer resembles the
original bat virus. Because the mutations are acquired randomly by selection,
there is no signature of a human gene jockey, but this is clearly a virus still
created by human intervention.”
Notes
[1] https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/virus-biological-us-army-weapons-fort-detrick-leak-ebola-anthrax-smallpox-ricin-a9042641.html
[2] https://www.lewrockwell.com/2020/02/gary-d-barnett/the-u-s-is-the-world-leader-of-bio-weapons-research-production-and-use-against-mankind/
[3] https://www.globalresearch.ca/us-military-bio-labs-in-ukraine-production-of-bio-weapons-and-disease-causing-agents/5605307
[5] https://www.abc.net.au/news/2019-07-24/why-did-donald-trump-say-he-could-kill-10-million-afghans/11342794
[6] https://www.presstv.com/Detail/2019/08/21/604070/US-President-Donald-Trump-Afghanistan-war-win-without-nuclear-weapons
Reprinted with permission
from The Unz
Review.
Larry Romanoff is a retired management consultant and businessman.
He has held senior executive positions in international consulting firms, and
owned an international import-export business. He has been a visiting professor
at Shanghai’s Fudan University, presenting case studies in international
affairs to senior EMBA classes. Mr. Romanoff lives in Shanghai and is currently
writing a series of ten books generally related to China and the West. He can
be contacted at: 2186604556@qq.com. He
is a frequent contributor to Global Research.
Copyright © Larry Romanoff, The Unz Review
Copyright © Larry Romanoff, The Unz Review