Pompeo accuses Iran for Coronavirus disinformation

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo condemned
disinformation campaigns from China, Russia, and Iran that aim to
"disparage" U.S. efforts to combat the spread of the coronavirus.
A reporter asked Pompeo whether there is "any
particular locus for this disinformation."
"It’s pretty diffuse, unfortunately. But we’ve
certainly seen it come from places like China, and Russia, and Iran, where
there are coordinated efforts to disparage what America is doing and our
activity to do all the things that President Trump has set in motion
here," Pompeo responded.
China's Communist Party has blamed the U.S. for the
virus, claiming that the coronavirus originated in the U.S., not in China.
Trump has pushed back against this narrative by repeatedly referring to it as
the "Chinese coronavirus." Pompeo himself called it the "Chinese
virus" early in his remarks. Yet many left-leaning American media outlets
have repeated the Chinese propaganda line that calling the virus
"Chinese" is racist.
In order to combat this disinformation, Pompeo
suggested the American people should "go to trusted sources for their
information." He also said American officials have confronted the Chinese,
Russian, and Iranian governments over the disinformation campaigns.
"We’ve made clear, we’ve spoken to these
countries directly, that they need to knock it off, that we don’t approve of
it," the secretary of State said. "This idea of transparency and
accurate information is very important."
He went on to insist that confronting misinformation
is not about retribution or politics but about saving lives.
"There’s been some discussion about China and
what they knew and when they knew it, and I’ve been very critical. We need to
know immediately, the world is entitled to know. The Chinese government was the
first to know of this risk to the world and that sets a special obligation to
make sure that that data gets to our scientists, our professionals," he
said.
"This is not about retribution," Pompeo
explained. "We need to make sure that, even today, the datasets that are
available. ... We talk about the absence of datasets, not being able to know
what to do, and so when you see a delay in information flowing from the Chinese
Communist Party, every moment of delay… creates risk to people all around the
world."