USDA ends 'maximum pain bird flu gain-of-function experiments' with Wuhan lab parent
Secretary Brooke Rollins tells Rep. Ben Cline, R-Va., at hearing that "it is my understanding that those [experiments] have been discontinued," and "if they haven't, then 100% yes."
The U.S. Department of Agriculture canceled its $1 million collaboration with the Chinese Academy of Sciences, the parent to the Wuhan Institute of Virology, to conduct gain-of-function experiments on bird flu viruses, Secretary Brooke Rollins told Rep. Ben Cline, R-Va.
Speaking at a House Agriculture Appropriations Subcommittee hearing, Rollins said "it is my understanding that those [experiments] have been discontinued just in the last few months" when Cline asked for their status, started in the Biden administration, and that if she's wrong, "then 100%, yes," USDA will stop them.
Cline said her predecessor Tom Vilsack "defended and distorted this risky research" when Vilsack testified, denying it was a "collaboration" even though the "project title" calls it that and claiming there was no "data sharing" even though public records show USDA visiting the China lab to "share results on site." The Chinese researcher lists the Wuhan Institute of Virology as an affiliation, Cline said.
"It is outrageous that U.S. taxpayer dollars were ever used by the Biden USDA to fund joint experiments with the Chinese Communist Party, especially research that could be catastrophic if mishandled or weaponized," Cline said in a statement.
The White Coat Waste Project, which exposed through public records requests the five-year project on what it called "maximum pain bird flu gain-of-function experiments" on birds as young as a day old, cheered Rollins' declaration.
"Taxpayers shouldn’t be forced to pay for the creation of pandemic-causing pathogens, and now, following a White Coat Waste campaign, they won’t have to," President Anthony Bellotti said.