EcoHealth Alliance CEO Peter Daszak just got another taxpayer-funded windfall. Instead of being deposed regarding his firm’s work at the Wuhan Institute of Virology, he is receiving a new pile of cash from the United States Agency for International Development (USAID). The new award gives EcoHealth Alliance $4,675,023 for a five-year project in Liberia, on the continent of Africa. USAID awarded the funding well after serious questions surfaced about EcoHealth Alliance’s coronavirus research. There are ample concerns about whether those activities violated the Obama administration’s ban on gain-of-function research even if they did not create the SARS-CoV-2 virus.
According to USASpending.gov, USAID provided the new funds under the Foreign Assistance Program. According to the website, the program objective is:
The Foreign Assistance Program works to support long-term and equitable economic growth and advance U.S. foreign policy objectives by supporting economic growth, agriculture and trade; global health; and democracy, conflict prevention and humanitarian assistance.
Further, the award description references the USAID Conservation Works Activity (CWA). According to the financial assistance manager who submitted, the CWA mission reads:
USAID CWA IS TO CONSERVE THREATENED AND ENDANGERED SPECIES BY STRENGTHENING PROTECTED AREAS AND HELPING COMMUNITIES BE LESS RELIANT ON PROTECTED RESOURCES FOR THEIR LIVELIHOODS.
So maybe EcoHealth Alliance is going to Liberia to educate residents on the dangers of eating bat soup. However, when you go to the website, it appears that all of EcoHealth’s missions revolve around identifying viruses in wildlife that could be “emerging threats.” This mission is the same one Daszak proposed to DARPA in the PREEMPT program. That proposed project aimed to identify new zoonotic pathogens that might jump from animals to infect humans. Ecohealth Alliance proposed sending teams into the woods to stick Q-tips into the mouths, ears, and rear ends of wild animals.
Then Daszak’s team would mess with the viruses in various ways in the lab. This process could include repeatedly passing them through mice with human characteristics to see if they could evolve to infect people. Incredibly, Daszak and his team suggested developing aerosolized vaccines containing versions of these viruses that appeared to have potential. Then they planned to spray it into the habitats where host animals may become infected with the virus of concern. Even our most advanced military technology development command thought the idea was reckless and could cause disease outbreaks.
If DARPA said heck no, you might wonder why USAID PREDICT is funding Eco Health Alliance. For the last ten years, this “independent” agency of the federal government funded by Congress has run a program that surveils pathogens in animals. Congress established USAID to create new markets for the United States by reducing poverty, increasing production in developing countries, and helping nations prosper under capitalism.
Now the agency includes “preventing the spread of pandemic disease” in the organization’s mission, along with other goals that overlap with the nation’s diplomatic corps, intelligence agencies, and global health agencies. Its history is a study in mission creep that USAID primarily executes by throwing money at various non-governmental organizations. For the last ten years, one program, USAID PREDICT, has “enabled global surveillance of pathogens that can spill over from animal hosts to people by building capacities to detect and discover viruses of pandemic potential.”
In layman’s terms, USAID has funded projects led by UC Davis to stick Q-tips and needles into animals, pull out pathogens and then assess whether or not they could cause human disease. The team has sampled more than 164,000 animals and people looking for disease spillover from animals. The project has detected 1,100 unique viruses, including 949 novel ones. EcoHealth Alliance is a Core Implementing Partner of the PREDICT program.
https://pjmedia.com/news-and-politics/stacey-lennox/2022/02/06/how-many-u-s-agencies-are-funding-peter-daszak-and-ecohealth-alliance-pulling-viruses-out-of-animals-n1553810
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