The FBI's Strange Anthrax Investigation Sheds
Light on COVID Lab-Leak Theory and Fauci's Emails
Mainstream institutions doubted the FBI had solved
the 2001 anthrax case. Either way, revelations that
emerged about U.S. Government bio-labs have newfound
relevance.
By Glenn Greenwald
June 07, 2021 "Information
Clearing House" - One of the most
significant events of the last two decades
has been largely memory-holed: the October, 2001
anthrax attacks in the U.S. Beginning just one week
after 9/11 and extending for another three weeks, a
highly weaponized and sophisticated strain of
anthrax had been sent around the country through the
U.S. Postal Service addressed to some of the
country's most prominent political and media
figures. As Americans were still reeling from the
devastation of 9/11, the anthrax killed five
Americans and sickened another seventeen.
As part of the extensive reporting I did on the
subsequent FBI investigation to find the
perpetrator(s), I
documented how significant these attacks were in
the public consciousness. ABC News, led by
investigative reporter Brian Ross, spent a full week
claiming that unnamed government sources told them
that government tests demonstrated a high likelihood
that the anthrax came from Saddam Hussein's
biological weapons program. The Washington Post,
in November, 2001,
also raised “the possibility that [this
weaponized strain of anthrax] may have slipped
through an informal network of scientists to Iraq.”
Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) appeared on The David
Letterman Show on October 18, 2001, and said:
“There is some indication, and I don't have the
conclusions, but some of this anthrax may -- and I
emphasize may -- have come from Iraq.” Three days
later, McCain
appeared on Meet the Press with Sen.
Joe Lieberman (D-CT) and said of the anthrax
perpetrators: “perhaps this is an international
organization and not one within the United States of
America,” while Lieberman said the anthrax was so
finely weaponized that “there's either a significant
amount of money behind this, or this is
state-sponsored, or this is stuff that was stolen
from the former Soviet program” (Lieberman added:
“Dr. Fauci can tell you more detail on that”).
In many ways, the prospect of a lethal,
engineered biological agent randomly showing up in
one's mailbox or contaminating local communities was
more terrifying than the extraordinary 9/11 attack
itself. All sorts of oddities shrouded the anthrax
mailings, including this
bizarre admission in 2008 by long-time
Washington Post columnist Richard Cohen: “I had
been told soon after Sept. 11 to secure Cipro, the
antidote to anthrax. The tip had come in a
roundabout way from a high government official. I
was carrying Cipro way before most people had ever
heard of it.” At the very least, those anthrax
attacks played a vital role in heightening fear
levels and a foundational sense of uncertainty that
shaped U.S. discourse and politics for years to
come. It meant that not just Americans living near
key power centers such as Manhattan and Washington
were endangered, but all Americans everywhere were:
even from their own mailboxes.
The FBI first falsely cast suspicion on a former
government scientist, Dr. Steven Hatfill, who had
conducted research on mailing deadly anthrax
strains. Following the FBI’s accusations, media
outlets began dutifully implying that Hatfill was
the culprit. A January, 2002, New York Times
column by Nicholas Kristof began by declaring:
“I think I know who sent out the anthrax last fall,”
then, without naming him, proceeded to perfectly
describe Hatfill in a way that made him easily
identifiable to everyone in that research community.
Hatfill sued the U.S. Government, which eventually
ended up paying him close to $6 million in damages
before officially and explicitly exonerating him and
apologizing. His lawsuit against the NYT
and Kristof was
dismissed since he was never named by the paper,
but the columnist
also apologized to him six years later.
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A full seven years after the attack, the FBI once
again claimed that it had found the perpetrator:
this time, it was the microbiologist Bruce Ivins, a
long-time “biodefense” researcher at the U.S. Army’s
infectious disease research lab in Fort Detrick,
Maryland. Yet before he could be indicted, Ivins
died,
apparently by suicide, to avoid prosecution. As
a result, the FBI was never required to prove its
case in court. The agency insisted, however, that
there was no doubt that Ivins was the anthrax
killer, citing genetic analysis of the anthrax
strain that they said conclusively matched the
anthrax found in Ivins’ U.S. Army lab, along with
circumstantial evidence pointing to him.
But virtually every mainstream institution other
than the FBI
harbored doubts. The New York Times
quoted Ivins’ co-workers as calling into
question the FBI’s claims (“The investigators looked
around, they decided they had to find somebody”),
and the paper also cited “vocal skepticism from key
members of Congress.” Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-VT), one
of the targets of the anthrax letters,
said explicitly he did not believe Ivins could
have carried out the attacks alone. Sen. Charles
Grassley (R-IA) and then-Rep. Rush Holt (D-NJ), a
physicist, said the same to me in interviews. The
nation’s three largest newspapers —
The New York Times,
The Washington Post, and
The Wall Street Journal — all editorially
called for independent investigations on the grounds
that the FBI’s evidence was inconclusive if not
outright unconvincing. One of the country’s most
prestigious science journals, Nature,
published an editorial under the headline “Case
Not Closed,” arguing, about the FBI’s key claims,
that “the jury is still out on those questions.”
When an independent investigation was finally
conducted in 2011 into the FBI’s scientific claims
against Ivins, much of that doubt converted into
full-blown skepticism. As The New
York Times put
it — in a 2011 article headlined "Expert Panel
Is Critical of F.B.I. Work in Investigating Anthrax
Letters" — the review “concludes that thebureau overstated the strength of genetic
analysis linking the mailed anthrax to a supply kept
by Bruce E. Ivins.”
A
Washington Post article --
headlined: "Anthrax report casts doubt on scientific
evidence in FBI case against Bruce Ivins" --
announced that "the report reignited a debate that
has simmered among some scientists and others who
have questioned the strength of the FBI's evidence
against Ivins."
An
in-depth joint investigation by ProPublica, PBS
and McClatchy — published under the headline “New
Evidence Adds Doubt to FBI’s Case Against Anthrax
Suspect” — concluded that “newly
available documents and the accounts of Ivins’
former colleagues shed fresh light on the evidence
and, while they don't exonerate Ivins, are at odds
with some of the science and circumstantial evidence
that the government said would have convicted him of
capital crimes.” It added: “even some of the
government’s science consultants wonder whether the
real killer is still at large.”The
report itself, issued by the National Research
Council, concluded that while the components of the
anthrax in Ivins’ lab were “consistent” with the
weaponized anthrax that had been sent, “the
scientific link between the letter material and
flask number RMR-1029 [found in Ivins’ lab] is not
as conclusive as stated in the DOJ Investigative
Summary."
In short, these were serious and widespread
mainstream doubts about the FBI’s case against Ivins,
and those have never been resolved. U.S.
institutions seemingly agreed to simply move on
without ever addressing lingering scientific and
other evidentiary questions regarding whether Ivins
was really involved in the anthrax attacks and, if
so, how it was possible that he could have carried
out this sophisticated attack within a top-secret
U.S. Army lab acting alone. So whitewashed is this
history that doubts about whether the FBI found the
real perpetrator are now mocked by smug Smart People
as a fringe conspiracy theory rather than what they
had been: the consensus of mainstream institutions.
But what we do know for certain
from this anthrax investigation is quite serious.
And because it is quite relevant to the current
debates over the origins of COVID-19, it is
well-worth reviewing. A
trove of emails from Dr. Anthony Fauci — who was
the government’s top infectious disease specialist
during the AIDS pandemic, the anthrax attacks, and
the COVID pandemic — was published on Monday by
BuzzFeed after they were produced pursuant to a
FOIA request. Among other things, they reveal that
in February and March of last year — at the time
that Fauci and others were dismissing any real
possibility that the coronavirus inadvertently
escaped from a lab, to the point that the Silicon
Valley monopolies Facebook and Google banned any
discussion of that theory -- Fauci and his
associates and colleagues were
privately discussing the possibility that the
virus had escaped from the Wuhan Institute of
Virology, possibly as part of a U.S.-funded joint
program with the scientists at that lab.
Last week, BBC
reported that “in recent weeks the controversial
claim that the pandemic might have leaked from a
Chinese laboratory — once dismissed by many as a
fringe conspiracy theory — has been gaining
traction.” President Biden
ordered an investigation into this lab-leak
possibility. And with Democrats now open to this
possibility, “Facebook reversed course Thursday and
said that it would no longer remove posts that claim
the virus is man-made,”
reportedThe Washington Post. Nobody
can rationally claim to know the origins of COVID,
and that is exactly why — as I
explained in an interview on the Rising
program this morning — it should be so disturbing
that Silicon Valley monopolies and the WHO/Fauci-led
scientific community spent a full year pretending to
have certainty about that “debunked” theory that
they plainly did not possess, to the point where
discussions of it were
prohibited on social media.
What we know — but have largely forgotten — from
the anthrax case is now vital to recall. What made
the anthrax attacks of 2001 particularly frightening
was how sophisticated and deadly the strain was. It
was not naturally occurring anthrax. Scientists
quickly identified it as the notorious Ames strain,
which researchers at the U.S. Army lab in Fort
Detrick had essentially invented. As PBS’
Frontline program
put it in 2011: “in October 2001, Northern
Arizona University microbiologist Dr. Paul Keim
identified that the anthrax used in the attack
letters was the Ames strain, a development he
described as ‘chilling’ because that particular
strain was developed in U.S. government
laboratories.” As Dr. Keim recalled in that
Frontline interview about his 2001 analysis of
the anthrax strain:
We were surprised it was the Ames strain. And
it was chilling at the same time, because the
Ames strain is a laboratory strain that had been
developed by the U.S. Army as a
vaccine-challenge strain. We knew that it was
highly virulent. In fact, that’s why the Army
used it, because it represented a more potent
challenge to vaccines that were being developed
by the U.S. Army. It wasn’t just some random
type of anthrax that you find in nature; it was
a laboratory strain, and that was very
significant to us, because that was the first
hint that this might really be a bioterrorism
event.
Why was the U.S. government creating exotic and
extraordinarily deadly infectious bacterial strains
and viruses that, even in small quantities, could
kill large numbers of people? The official position
of the U.S. Government is that it does not engage in
offensive bioweapons research: meaning
research designed to create weaponized viruses as
weapons of war. The U.S. has signed treaties barring
such research. But in the wake of the anthrax
attacks — especially once the FBI’s own theory was
that the anthrax was sent by a U.S. Army scientist
from his stash at Fort Detrick — U.S. officials were
forced to acknowledge that they do engage in
defensive bioweapons research: meaning research
designed to allow the development of vaccines and
other defenses in the event that another country
unleashes a biological attack.
But ultimately, that distinction barely matters.
For both offensive and defensive bioweapons
research, scientists must create, cultivate,
manipulate and store non-natural viruses or
infectious bacteria in their labs, whether to study
them for weaponization or for vaccines. A
fascinating-in-retrospect
New Yorker
article from March, 2002, featured the
suspicions of molecular biologist Barbara Hatch
Rosenberg, who had “strongly implied that the F.B.I.
was moving much more slowly in its anthrax
investigation than it had any reason to.” Like
The New York Times, the magazine (without
naming him) detailed her speculation that Dr.
Hatfill was the perpetrator (though her theory about
his motive — that he wanted to scare people about
anthrax in order to increase funding for research —
was virtually identical to the FBI’s ultimate
accusations about Dr. Ivins’ motives).
But the key point that is particularly relevant
now is what all of this said about the kind of very
dangerous research the U.S. Government, along with
other large governments, conducts in bioweapons
research labs. Namely, they manufacture and store
extremely lethal biological agents that, if they
escape from the lab either deliberately or
inadvertently, can jeopardize the human species. As
the article put it:
The United States officially forswore
biological-weapons development in 1969, and
signed the 1972 Biological Weapons Convention,
along with many other nations. But Rosenberg
believes that the American bioweapons program,
which won't allow itself to be monitored, may
not be in strict compliance with the convention.
If the perpetrator of the anthrax attacks is who
she thinks it is, that would put the American
program in a bad light, and it would prove that
she was right to demand that the program be
monitored.
If the government is saying that the
perpetrator was probably an American, it's hard
to imagine how it couldn't have been an American
who worked in a government-supported bioweapons
lab. Think back to the panicky month of October
[2001]: would knowing that have made you less
nervous, or more?
Having extensively reported on the FBI’s
investigation into the anthrax case and ultimate
claim to have solved it, I continue to share all the
doubts that were so widely expressed at the time
about whether any of that was true. But what we know
for certain is that the U.S. government and other
governments do conduct research which requires the
manufacture of deadly viruses and infectious
bacterial strains. Dr. Fauci has acknowledged that
the U.S. government
indirectly funded research by the Wuhan
Institute of Virology into coronaviruses, though he
denies that this was for so-called “gain of
function” research,
whereby naturally occurring viruses are manipulated
to make them more transmissible and/or more harmful
to humans.
We do not know for sure if the COVID-19 virus
escaped from the Wuhan lab, another lab, or jumped
from animals to humans. But what we do know for
certain — from the anthrax investigation — is that
governments most definitely conduct the sort of
research that could produce novel coronaviruses. Dr.
Rosenberg, the subject of the 2002 New Yorker
article, was suggesting that the F.B.I. was
purposely impeding its own investigation because
they knew that the anthrax actually came from the
U.S. government’s own lab and wanted to prevent
exposure of the real bio-research that is done
there. We should again ponder why the pervasive
mainstream doubts about the F.B.I.’s case against
Ivins have been memory-holed. We should also reflect
on what we learned about government research into
highly lethal viruses and bacterial strains from
that still-strange episode.
Glenn Greenwald is a journalist,
constitutional lawyer, and author of four New York
Times bestselling books on politics and law. His
most recent book, “No Place to Hide,” is about the
U.S. surveillance state and his experiences
reporting on the Snowden documents around the world.
Prior to co-founding The Intercept, Greenwald’s
column was featured in The Guardian and Salon.
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