For more than four years, Americans who questioned the true nature and scope of United States’ taxpayer funded biological laboratories in Ukraine were ridiculed, smeared, censored, and denounced as conspiracy theorists. Television pundits dismissed them. Corporate media outlets mocked them. Members of the political establishment insisted that any discussion of American involvement in Ukrainian biolaboratories was nothing more than Russian propaganda. Now, thanks to a sweeping declassification ordered by Director of National Intelligence (DNI) Tulsi Gabbard, the American people are finally learning that much of what they were told was false.The newly released Intelligence Community (IC) documents reveal that American taxpayers funded and supported an enormous international biological research network consisting of more than 120 laboratories in over 30 countries. Among the most significant concentrations of those facilities were more than 40 laboratories located throughout Ukraine. According to the declassified material, approximately $200 million in American funding flowed into these facilities through the Department of Defense’s (now the Department of War) Biological Threat Reduction Program, an initiative that traces its origins to post-Soviet efforts to secure dangerous biological materials left behind after the collapse of the Soviet Union. The disclosure is remarkable not because it proves the existence of an active offensive biological weapons program. The documents do not establish that conclusion. Rather, the significance lies in the extraordinary gap between what the public was told and what government officials privately knew.Stone Cold Truth with Roger Stone is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.For years, Americans were assured that concerns about Ukrainian biolabs were entirely fabricated. Yet the newly released materials confirm that these laboratories housed and studied some of the world’s most dangerous pathogens, including anthrax, plague, tularemia, tuberculosis, Ebola, Marburg virus, Lassa fever, MERS, SARS, highly pathogenic avian influenza, and numerous other potentially catastrophic biological agents. The documents further reveal extensive American involvement in the construction, modernization, funding, staffing, training, and operation of these facilities. U.S. contractors, particularly Black & Veatch, were deeply involved in designing and upgrading laboratories throughout Ukraine. Millions of dollars were invested in individual sites. American scientists worked alongside Ukrainian personnel. Research projects included genomic studies of highly infectious diseases and the modernization of containment facilities capable of handling exceptionally dangerous pathogens.The revelations are especially striking because they echo statements made during the earliest days of the Russia-Ukraine war that were categorically dismissed by Western governments and media organizations. In March of 2022, then Under Secretary of State Victoria Nuland acknowledged during Senate testimony that Ukraine possessed “biological research facilities.” She further admitted that American officials were concerned that Russian forces could gain access to biological materials stored within those facilities. At the time, that testimony generated enormous controversy because it contradicted previous assurances that concerns regarding biolaboratories in Ukraine were entirely unfounded. Rather than prompting a broader public discussion, however, many establishment figures doubled down on efforts to discredit anyone who raised additional questions.The declassified materials released by DNI Gabbard provide far greater detail than was previously available. They identify specific facilities, construction costs, pathogen repositories, contractor relationships, biosafety concerns, and vulnerabilities that existed as Russian forces advanced into Ukrainian territory. One particularly noteworthy facility is the Institute of Experimental and Clinical Veterinary Medicine in Kharkiv. Publicly available information and the newly disclosed analysis indicate that the site maintained collections of dangerous pathogens and participated in numerous Defense Threat Reduction Agency-funded projects. The facility reportedly had documented biosafety deficiencies, historical connections to Soviet-era biological programs, and was considered vulnerable to compromise during the conflict.Critics of the program argue that the distinction between defensive biological research and offensive capability is often less clear than government officials acknowledge. Biological research is inherently dual-use. Knowledge gained through legitimate disease surveillance and pathogen analysis can also be applied to offensive purposes if placed in the wrong hands. That reality is precisely why transparency and oversight are so essential.The broader issue extends well beyond Ukraine. The declassified materials suggest that American taxpayers financed an extensive global network of biological laboratories operating under varying levels of secrecy. Much of this work was conducted far from public scrutiny despite involving highly dangerous pathogens and substantial federal expenditures.Director Gabbard has been blunt in her criticism of previous government officials and public health authorities. She has accused members of prior administrations, intelligence officials, and prominent health figures of misleading the public regarding the scope and nature of these programs. Her release of these documents follows President Donald Trump’s 2025 executive order ending federal funding for gain-of-function research abroad, reflecting a dramatic shift in American biosecurity policy. The connection to the gain-of-function debate cannot be ignored. In the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, millions of Americans became acutely aware of the catastrophic consequences that can result when dangerous pathogens escape containment or when biological research lacks adequate oversight. Whether one believes COVID originated naturally or through a laboratory accident, the pandemic demonstrated that biological risks are not abstract theoretical concerns. They are matters of national survival.What the Gabbard declassification ultimately exposes is not necessarily an active biological weapons conspiracy. What it exposes is something equally troubling: a pattern of secrecy, dismissal, and public deception. Americans were told these facilities essentially did not exist. They did. Americans were told there was no significant U.S. involvement. There was. Americans were told concerns about dangerous pathogens were baseless. They were not. Americans were told questions themselves were illegitimate. They were not. Reasonable citizens can debate the purpose of these programs. They can debate whether the research was defensive, necessary, or beneficial. They can debate whether the expenditures were justified. But what can no longer be honestly debated is that the American people were denied critical information about activities conducted in their name and with their tax dollars.The lesson here extends far beyond Ukraine. A free society depends upon transparency, accountability, and informed consent of the governed. When government officials and media institutions work in concert to suppress legitimate questions, public trust inevitably erodes. The release of these documents marks an important step toward restoring that trust. Yet many questions remain unanswered. Who authorized the secrecy? Why were legitimate inquiries dismissed so aggressively? What additional information remains classified? And perhaps most importantly, what safeguards are now in place to ensure that high-risk biological research never again proceeds beyond meaningful public oversight? Those are questions the American people deserve answered. And after years of being told not to ask them, they are finally asking anyway.Thanks for reading Stone Cold Truth with Roger Stone! This post is public so feel free to share it.Share