By Kevin D.
Williamson
Saturday, May
29, 2021
The possibility that COVID-19 originated
in a Wuhan research laboratory is not something from the fever dreams of
conspiracy theory: No less a fixture of the establishment than Anthony Fauci
himself says he is “not convinced” the virus emerged naturally from contact
with animals. President Joe Biden has ordered an investigation, of sorts, into the
question.
The evidence is far from conclusive. And
that is the problem — it’s going to stay inconclusive without a real
investigation, something that neither the bosses in Beijing nor the bureaucrats
of the World Health Organization can promise with any credibility.
The 90-day review Biden has requested from
the US intelligence community is not the kind of investigation that’s needed.
Without access to the relevant data in China, this “investigation” will amount
to a review of the intelligence that already is available. The problem is not
that US authorities have not been looking into what happened in Wuhan — we can
safely assume that project got ample encouragement from former President Donald
Trump, who loved to speak of the “China virus.” The problem is that Beijing is
obstructing international efforts to study the origin of COVID-19 and must be
persuaded to cooperate.
The Biden administration likes to talk
about diplomacy and multilateralism, and now would be an excellent time for
some of that. But there’s very little to be had.
Instead, the best the administration has
been able to muster is having Xavier Becerra — the left-wing lawyer who, for
some reason, serves as Biden’s secretary of health and human services — lecture
the WHO about the need to be “transparent” in this matter.
With apologies to such titans as Michael
O. Leavitt and Sylvia Mathews Burwell, secretaries of health and human services
are not world-shaking figures. This is a job for heads of government — lots of
them.
Consider a counterexample.
When Iraqi strongman Saddam Hussein
invaded Kuwait in 1990, the administration of former President George H. W.
Bush put on a master class in high-speed diplomacy. The United Nations and the
Arab League were brought on board. Saudi Arabia pledged billions to support the
effort to free Kuwait. Arab leaders ranging from Egypt’s Hosni Mubarak to
Syria’s Hafez al-Assad supported the effort. Margaret Thatcher, Helmut Kohl and
Brian Mulroney backed the effort, and François Mitterrand dispatched 18,000
troops, including the French Foreign Legion and other support.
In a particularly deft bit of diplomacy,
the Israelis were persuaded to sideline themselves even as threats — and then
missiles — rained on them. The world rallied under US leadership.
George H. W. Bush was underappreciated in
his time and is missed in ours. And his kind of diplomacy should be the
template for our unfinished business in Wuhan — not a military invasion, but a
shoulder-to-shoulder, worldwide effort that leaves Beijing isolated, under inescapable
pressure with nowhere to turn.
We don’t need the guy who has Donna
Shalala’s old job on that particular case — we need Boris Johnson, Yoshihide
Suga, Angela Merkel, Ursula von der Leyen, Emmanuel Macron, Scott Morrison,
Narendra Modi, Muhammad Buhari, etc.
This will have to happen, if it happens,
under US leadership — because that is the only such leadership that is, as a
practical matter, available.
If Iraq had been allowed to swallow Kuwait
30 years ago, it would have been a footnote in world history. The COVID-19
epidemic, in contrast, has been a genuinely world-changing event. Understanding
how it came to happen is an absolute necessity — and preventing something like
it from happening again is, properly understood, the most important task on the
desk of government leaders worldwide.
If this was a laboratory accident, then it
is a laboratory accident that can happen again.
It is not as though Beijing is entitled to
the benefit of the doubt here. The dishonesty of Chinese leaders in this matter
is well-established, as is their incompetence and negligence in related
matters: from the coverups of the Bohai Bay oil spill and the Songhua River
benzene dump to the Long March 5B rocket falling out of the sky.
Americans sometimes think of Xi Jinping
& Co. as evil geniuses, but their measures are often crude and inept. A
police state is a useful instrument for keeping members of religious minorities
in concentration camps, but it is not a very useful instrument for keeping
viruses in safe storage.
The big diplomatic item on President
Biden’s agenda right now is planning a lunch date with Vladimir Putin in Geneva
next month. Russia surely needs attention, but the big show is China. President
Biden can make time to lecture the Germans about gas pipelines or to have
Secretary Whatshisname mouth a few platitudes about transparency, but he should
be building a multinational coalition to get answers about Wuhan — and to
reduce the likelihood of another worldwide pandemic that will kill millions or
billions.
“America’s back,” Biden said. Time to
deliver.
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