China Concealed Extent of Virus Outbreak, U.S. Intelligence Says
作者:Nick Wadhams and Jennifer Jacobs 来源:Bloomberg
China has concealed the extent
of the coronavirus outbreak in its country, under-reporting both total cases
and deaths it’s suffered from the disease, the U.S. intelligence community
concluded in a classified report to the White House, according to three U.S.
officials.
The officials asked not to be
identified because the report is secret, and they declined to detail its
contents. But the thrust, they said, is that China’s public reporting on cases
and deaths is intentionally incomplete. Two of the officials said the report
concludes that China’s numbers are fake.
The report was received by the
White House last week, one of the officials said.
The outbreak began in China’s
Hubei province in late 2019, but the country has publicly reported only about
82,000 cases and 3,300 deaths, according to data compiled by Johns Hopkins University. That
compares to more than 189,000 cases and more than 4,000 deaths in the U.S.,
which has the largest publicly reported outbreak in the world.
Communications staff at the
White House and the Chinese embassy in Washington didn’t immediately respond to
requests for comment.
“The reality is that we could
have been better off if China had been more forthcoming,” Vice President Mike
Pence said Wednesday on CNN. “What appears evident now is that long before the
world learned in December that China was dealing with this, and maybe as much
as a month earlier than that, that the outbreak was real in China.
While China eventually imposed
a strict lockdown beyond those of less autocratic nations, there has been
considerable skepticism toward China’s reported numbers, both outside and within
the country. The Chinese government has repeatedly revised its methodology for
counting cases, for weeks excluding people without symptoms entirely, and only
on Tuesday added more than 1,500 asymptomatic cases to its total.
Stacks of thousands of
urns outside funeral homes in Hubei province have
driven public doubt in Beijing’s reporting.
Republican lawmakers in the
U.S. have been particularly harsh about China’s role in the outbreak. Enhancing
Beijing’s role in the pandemic could be politically helpful to President Donald
Trump, who has sought to shift blame for the U.S. outbreak away from his
administration’s delays in achieving widespread testing for the virus and
mobilizing greater production of supplies such as face masks and hospital
ventilators.
“The claim that the United
States has more coronavirus deaths than China is false,” Senator Ben Sasse, a
Nebraska Republican, said in a statement after Bloomberg News published its
report. “Without commenting on any classified information, this much is
painfully obvious: The Chinese Communist Party has lied, is lying, and will
continue to lie about coronavirus to protect the regime.”
Airport employees wear full body protective suits at Pudong International Airport in Shanghai on March 28.
Deborah Birx, the State
Department immunologist advising the White House on its response to the
outbreak, said Tuesday that China’s public reporting influenced assumptions
elsewhere in the world about the nature of the virus.
“The medical community made — interpreted the
Chinese data as: This was serious, but smaller than anyone expected,” she said
at a news conference on Tuesday. “Because I think probably we were missing a
significant amount of the data, now that what we see happened to Italy and see
what happened to Spain.”
China isn’t the only country
with suspect public reporting. Western officials have pointed to Iran, Russia,
Indonesia and especially North Korea, which has not reported a single case of
the disease, as probable under-counts. Others including Saudi Arabia and Egypt
may also be playing down their numbers.
U.S. Secretary of State Michael
Pompeo has publicly urged China and other nations to be transparent about their
outbreaks. He has repeatedly accused China of covering up the extent of the
problem and being slow to share information, especially in the weeks after the
virus first emerged, and blocking offers of help from American experts.
“This data set matters,” he
said at a news conference in Washington on Tuesday. The development of medical
therapies and public-health measures to combat the virus “so that we can save
lives depends on the ability to have confidence and information about what has
actually transpired,” he said.
“I would urge every nation: Do
your best to collect the data. Do your best to share that information,” he
said. “We’re doing that.”
— With assistance by Justin
Sink
来源时间:2020/4/2 发布时间:2020/4/1
旧文章ID:21158