Leader of Operation Warp Speed Dies Suddenly at 65

By Sarah Owermohle

WASHINGTON — Paul Mango, an integral part of the Trump administration’s drive to invent coronavirus vaccines and treatments, has died at 65.

Mango joined former President Trump’s Health and Human Services Department in 2019 as deputy chief of staff. During the Covid-19 pandemic, he became the agency’s chief liaison to Operation Warp Speed, the record-breaking effort to develop new vaccines and medicines to counter the coronavirus pandemic.

He published a memoir about those months, “Warp Speed: Inside the Operation That Beat COVID, the Critics, and the Odds,” in 2022. In the book he lauded Moderna’s cooperation with the government in developing clinical trials and delivering millions of doses. He criticized Pfizer for a lack of transparency and not collaborating more with the Trump administration. But overall, he painted a picture of a national effort to overcome historical odds to develop new vaccines.

“Paul was a mentor and friend who dedicated his life to serving his country, who led a life of amazing accomplishment, and who will be dearly missed,” said Brian Blase, president of the Paragon Health Institute, where Mango worked as an adviser. Mango was “instrumental” in the success of Operation Warp Speed, Blase said…

Paul Mango, Warp Speed leader and Trump adviser, dies at 65

3 thoughts on “Leader of Operation Warp Speed Dies Suddenly at 65”

  1. I wonder why Anthony Fauci, Bill Gates, Melinda Gates, the CEOs of Moderna and Pfizer and company haven’t “died suddenly.” Could it be that they never got the death shots they sadistically promoted?

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