Sen. Joni Ernst demands answers on Biden’s USDA spending $1M on ‘dangerous bird flu experiments’ with China

Sen. Joni Ernst (R-Iowa) is demanding information about President Biden’s Department of Agriculture spending $1 million in US taxpayer funds on “dangerous bird flu experiments” in cooperation with the Chinese government — and a researcher connected to the Wuhan Institute of Virology, according to a letter exclusively obtained by The Post.

Ernst wrote to USDA Secretary Tom Vilsack on Wednesday for details about the project, which involves “a highly pathogenic avian influenza virus” and is being conducted “in collaboration” with the UK, the Chinese Academy of Sciences and Wenjun Liu, a researcher “affiliated with the Wuhan Institute of Virology’s Center for Biosafety Mega-Science Key Laboratory of Special Pathogens.”

The Biden administration awarded the $1 million grant from April 2021 to March 2026 for “wet-lab virology” experiments involving “strains of avian influenza virus” that “pose the greatest risk to avian or human populations.”

The Chinese Academy of Sciences in Beijing will help with tests to infect vaccinated chickens, mallard ducks, species of Chinese geese and Japanese quail to evaluate the virus’ transmissibility and “potential to jump into mammalian hosts.”

Ernst told Vilsack to hand over any departmental information about whether there are any safeguards in place, if the experiments constitute risky gain-of-function research, and what portion is being done in China.

Gain-of-function research involves experimentation that aims to increase the transmissibility or virulence of pathogens in order to understand their potential to cause pandemics.

Sen. Joni Ernst (R-Iowa) is demanding information about President Biden’s Department of Agriculture spending $1 million in US taxpayer funds on “dangerous bird flu experiments” in cooperation with the Chinese government. Getty Images
The “highly pathogenic avian influenza virus” research is being conducted with the UK and the Chinese Academy of Sciences, pictured above. AFP via Getty Images

“The health and safety of Americans are too important to just wing it, and Biden’s USDA should have had more appre-hen-sion before sending any taxpayer dollars to collaborate with the CCP on risky avian flu research,” Ernst told The Post in a statement.

“They should know by now to suspect ‘fowl’ play when it comes to researchers who have ties to the dangerous Wuhan Lab, and simply switching from bats to birds causes concern that they are creating more pathogens of pandemic potential,” she added, referring to risky experiments that may have led to the COVID-19 pandemic.

“Here’s my warning: the Biden administration should be walking on eggshells until they cut off every cent going to our adversaries. We cannot allow what happened in Wuhan to happen again.”

Ernst told USDA Secretary Tom Vilsack (above) to hand over any departmental information about whether there are any safeguards in place, if the experiments constitute risky gain-of-function research and what portion is being done in China. REUTERS

Such viral experiments have “already caused outbreaks and killed humans,” Ernst also wrote to Vilsack, noting that “China’s labs have notoriously lax safety standards.”

Other bird flu testing will take place at the USDA’s Agricultural Research Service in Athens, Ga., while the University of Edinburgh’s Roslin Institute will complete statistical modeling for the experiments.

The Post has reached out to the USDA for comment.

Ernst said the nonprofit taxpayer watchdog group White Coat Waste Project alerted her to the alarming experiments.

“Here’s my warning: the Biden administration should be walking on eggshells until they cut off every cent going to our adversaries,” Ernst said. “We cannot allow what happened in Wuhan to happen again.” REUTERS

The group’s senior vice president, Justin Goodman, said Congress should use the upcoming Farm Bill to cut off funding to “unaccountable animal labs” in China and Russia for good.

Last year, a federal government report on National Institutes of Health (NIH) and US Agency for International Development (USAID) subgrants found more than $2 million in taxpayer funds flowed to Chinese research institutions in Wuhan.

That included more than $1.4 million to the Manhattan-based EcoHealth Alliance, which went on to fund “genetic experiments to combine naturally occurring bat coronaviruses with SARS and MERS viruses, resulting in hybridized (also known as chimeric) coronavirus strains” at the Wuhan Institute of Virology.

Former US intelligence officials, the FBI, Energy Department and scientific experts now believe the pandemic most likely began when the virus leaked out of a lab in Wuhan, where research institutions were known to have conducted gain-of-function experiments. AFP via Getty Images

Former US intelligence officials, the FBI, Energy Department and scientific experts now believe the pandemic most likely began when the virus leaked out of a lab in Wuhan, where research institutions were known to have conducted gain-of-function experiments.

Rutgers University molecular biologist Dr. Richard Ebright previously told The Post that those experiments violated federal laws governing research on both gain-of-function and enhanced potential pandemic pathogen research.

EcoHealth has maintained it never conducted gain-of-function research and that its work in Wuhan has been misrepresented.

Wenju Liu, a researcher connected to the Wuhan Institute of Virology, is named on the grant project proposal. Institute of Microbiology, Chinese Academy of Sciences

Ernst and Rep. Mike Gallagher, who chairs the House Select Committee on the Chinese Communist Party, last month demanded a separate investigation by the Pentagon’s inspector general into more than $50 million in defense grants that funded Chinese pandemic research labs.

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