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Trump had 2 intelligence briefings in Jan that said Covid wasn’t deadly or of much import

During the briefings, held in the last week of January, Trump was told that the virus would spread from China, and that Beijing was withholding key data on it.

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Washington: The intelligence community briefed President Donald Trump twice in the eight days before he imposed travel restrictions on China in an attempt to stop the spread of coronavirus, said a senior White House official familiar with the briefings.

In a 23 January briefing, Trump was told the virus was poised to spread globally from China and that becoming infected wouldn’t be deadly for most people.

Trump said Sunday night that he was told on 23 Jan. that a virus might be coming but that it wasn’t of much import.

“They said it very matter of factly,” he said during a town hall broadcast on Fox News, adding that the intelligence community would release more information on Monday.

The 23 Jan. session was the first time the intelligence community briefed the president on Covid-19, said the official, who requested anonymity to describe the classified briefings.

The next time intelligence officials spoke to Trump on the topic was 28 Jan., when he received information showing the virus was spreading outside of China but that all deaths remained inside of that country, the official said. Trump was also told at the time that China wasn’t sharing key data about the virus, according to the official.

The White House official said those were the only times Trump was briefed by the intelligence community about the virus during January. It isn’t clear what information the intelligence community said China was withholding, or if Trump was briefed about the incredible strain a major outbreak in the U.S. could place on the health-care system, the economy and Americans’ way of life.

Who Knew What?

The new information sheds more light about what the president and U.S. intelligence agencies knew in the early days of Covid-19’s spread in China. Trump and his administration have come under fire for their early response efforts.

More than 1.1 million people in the U.S. have been infected by the virus and more than 67,000 have died, the largest outbreak in the world.


Also read: Trump seeks to blame China for US coronavirus outbreak, but retaliation seems unlikely


Trump has repeatedly pointed to his decision on 31 Jan. to restrict travel from China to rebut critics who say he was too slow to react. The moves were announced three days after Trump’s second January intelligence briefing, in which he was informed the virus was becoming a serious global concern.

U.S. intelligence agencies included warnings about the virus in more than a dozen classified briefings prepared for Trump in January and February, the Washington Post reported on April 27, citing anonymous current and former U.S. officials.

Daily Briefing

The president’s intelligence brief, which is produced each day and contains sensitive information about global threats, included comprehensive articles about the global spread of Covid-19 as well as smaller items about the status of the outbreak, the Post reported.

The daily briefing began to document a new virus originating in Wuhan, China, at the beginning of January but early intelligence was only partial and didn’t address the possibility of a major U.S. outbreak, the Post report said.

By mid- to late January, the virus was being mentioned more frequently and Trump was almost certainly told about it orally, according to the Post report.

In a Twitter post on Sunday, the president said “Intelligence has just reported to me that I was correct, and that they did NOT bring up the CoronaVirus subject matter until late into January.”

But public-health experts and Democrats say the administration wasted time in February by not imposing restrictions on everyday life that could have slowed the virus’ spread to every U.S. state.

Trump spent much of that time period publicly downplaying the threat and praising China’s response. He continued to hold campaign rallies, traveled to India, played golf in Florida and visited the Daytona International Speedway. He didn’t announce federal social distancing recommendations until 16 March. –Bloomberg 


Also read: From India to the US, coronavirus is straining the concept of federalism


 

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