Five Eyes nations set intelligence trap on Wuhan
SHARRI MARKSON - SEPTEMBER 28, 2021
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The Five Eyes foreign ministers deliberately discussed highly classified intelligence about their investigation into the origins of the Covid-19 pandemic on an unsecured line in a bid to gauge the reaction of Chinese authorities intercepting the call.
Mike Pompeo, then US secretary of state, hosted the call in early January with his Five Eyes partners including Foreign Minister Marise Payne and then British foreign secretary Dominic Raab to discuss intelligence that Wuhan Institute of Virology scientists had been infected with Covid-19 in November 2019, the suspected first cluster.
In a sophisticated intelligence operation, the Five Eyes call was classified but it was deliberately held on an open line in the knowledge the Chinese would be likely tapping the call, according to What Really Happened in Wuhan, a new book about the origins of the pandemic.
“Let them hear you and then listen to their reaction. Let them know you know and see what reverberates back through the system,” a senior source said.
A second source said: “Anyone who had the ability to collect any communications probably knew that it was happening, especially the Chinese.”
The intelligence that formed the subject of the Five Eyes call also included information that tied the Chinese military to the Wuhan Institute of Virology and even indicated the laboratory had been undertaking secret military projects.
Five Eyes is the intelligence-sharing agreement between the US, Australia, the UK, New Zealand and Canada. While the intelligence had already been shared among them, the call’s purpose was to discuss making it public.
During the call, Mr Raab was profusely thankful to Mr Pompeo for releasing this information. Senator Payne also supported declassification, advocating transparency over secrecy.
“The free world expects the US to lead and not kowtow,” a senior source familiar with the call said.
While the foreign ministers agreed with the decision to declassify the intelligence, there was serious pushback among some senior figures in the intelligence community who rejected the idea that the information should be thrust into the public domain.
“That decision by Pompeo to declassify the intelligence was contested, and parts of (the) US intelligence community didn’t agree,” a Five Eyes source said.
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