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Trump warned about virus repeatedly in Jan. and Feb.: Report

The warnings -- more than a dozen included in classified briefings known as the President's Daily Brief -- came during a time the president was mostly downplaying the threat of a COVID-19 pandemic.

News Desk (Agence France-Presse)
Washington, United States
Tue, April 28, 2020 Published on Apr. 28, 2020 Published on 2020-04-28T10:44:59+07:00

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Two men hang signs off their boat as they gather with others on Lake Union to protest against the recreational fishing ban in Washington State, in place until at least May 4 due to the COVID-19 outbreak, in Seattle, Washington, US on Sunday.  Two men hang signs off their boat as they gather with others on Lake Union to protest against the recreational fishing ban in Washington State, in place until at least May 4 due to the COVID-19 outbreak, in Seattle, Washington, US on Sunday. (REUTERS/Lindsey Wasson)

U

S President Donald Trump was repeatedly warned about the dangers of the novel coronavirus in intelligence briefings in January and February, The Washington Post reported late Monday.

The warnings -- more than a dozen included in classified briefings known as the President's Daily Brief -- came during a time the president was mostly downplaying the threat of a COVID-19 pandemic.

The Post, citing unnamed current and former US officials, said the warnings were contained in the daily classified summary of the most important global issues and security threats.

For weeks, the Daily Briefs traced the spread of the virus, said that China was suppressing information about the virus' lethality and ease of transmission, and mentioned the frightful political and economic consequences, the Post said.

The president, who officials told the Post often does not read the briefings and bristles at having to listen to oral summaries, failed to mobilize for a major pandemic.

Trump did restrict travel between the United States and China in late January, but he spent most of the following month downplaying the threat.

He did not declare a national emergency over the coronavirus pandemic until March 13, as the stock market plummeted and virus cases were on the rise in New York.

As of late Monday, the United States recorded an overall coronavirus death toll of 56,144, with 988,197 confirmed infections, according to a tally by Johns Hopkins University.

 

 

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