Booming: Chinese lab a credible source of virus

U.S. Deputy Security Advisor Bo Ming stated earlier in the day that the most credible source of COVID-19 is the Wuhan P4 laboratory.

Matthew Pottinger, deputy national security adviser and China correspondent, recently stated at an international conference that there is growing evidence that the COVID-19 virus (the Chinese Communist virus) was leaked from a laboratory in Wuhan, China. The statement was seen as a “hard-line” stance by the Trump administration on the source of the virus.

According to the Daily Mail on Jan. 3, Bomen made the remarks at a networking meeting with British officials.

“There is growing evidence that laboratories may be the most credible source of this virus.” He said the latest U.S. intelligence indicates that the virus was spread from a lab 11 miles from the Wuhan aquatic market due to a “leak or accident.

“Even establishment figures in Beijing have publicly denied the story about the seafood market,” Bomin added. Booming added.

The network meeting comes as the World health Organization WHO prepares to go to Wuhan to investigate the pandemic plague.

Booming called on parliamentarians around the world to come forward and expose the WHO’s so-called investigation as a “Potemkin” game of creating a false narrative that serves to whitewash the Chinese Communist government.

British participants at the meeting said it was clear from Bomen’s words that the U.S. government was taking a “tougher” stance on the claim that the virus came “from a laboratory”; if senior U.S. government intelligence officials have made such a statement, the British said, it is time for the British government to consider their response and demand compensation from the Chinese Communist government.

A senior adviser to the Trump administration who speaks fluent Chinese, Bo Ming served as a China correspondent for Reuters and the Wall Street Journal from 1998 to 2005. He later joined the U.S. Marine Corps as an intelligence officer, joined the U.S. National Security Council in 2017 as director of Asian affairs, and is currently the U.S. deputy national security adviser.