According to a comprehensive report by China News Service on July 16, recently, the US White House frequently launched an attack on Fuch, the chief infectious disease expert, in an attempt to weaken its influence. In an interview with American media on the 15th local time, Foch responded that the White House's criticism was "completely wrong" and that the move "will eventually hurt the president." He said that now it is time to "stop this nonsense" and find a way to control the epidemic.

Data graph: Fuch, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases. China News Agency reporter Sha Hanting

  According to reports, as the nationwide epidemic continued to spread, the White House tried to shift responsibility to Foch. A number of US media have previously exposed a White House document that lists Fuchs’ previous comments on the new coronavirus to weaken his outspoken assessment of the United States’ weak response to the epidemic.

  Later, Navarro, the US President Trump’s chief trade adviser, published a column entitled “Anthony Fudge was wrong in everything I interacted with” on USA Today. Sgarvino, the White House deputy chief of staff for communications, also shared a caricature on social media earlier.

  In an interview with Atlantic Monthly, Foch said, "I insist on everything I said, and in the circumstances at that time, what I said was absolutely true."

  He also claimed that the White House criticized him as "nonsense" and "completely wrong." Fuch said, "When the staff spoke such words, they were opposed by the entire scientific and media community, which would eventually hurt the president."

Data Map: US President Trump. China News Agency reporter Chen Meng

  Forge believes that the White House's actions are "strange," and that the government has made a "big mistake", but his job is too critical to resign now.

  When asked to evaluate the government's response to the epidemic, Fudge said, we almost have to "start again." Today, we should "stop this nonsense" and find ways to control the epidemic. He also said that the atmosphere of party controversy surrounding the virus was disturbing. "This will distract my attention. I hope that everyone will work together to keep things within controllable limits, rather than distracting people back and forth. This approach is meaningless."