About: Bob Drogin

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Bob Drogin (c. 1952) is an American journalist and author. He worked for the Los Angeles Times, for nearly four decades. Drogin began his career with the Times as a national correspondent, based in New York, traveling to nearly every state in the United States. He spent eight years as a foreign correspondent, and as bureau chief in Manila and Johannesburg, before returning to the U.S. He covered intelligence and national security in the Washington bureau, from 1998 until retiring in November 2020.

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  • Bob Drogin (c. 1952) is an American journalist and author. He worked for the Los Angeles Times, for nearly four decades. Drogin began his career with the Times as a national correspondent, based in New York, traveling to nearly every state in the United States. He spent eight years as a foreign correspondent, and as bureau chief in Manila and Johannesburg, before returning to the U.S. He covered intelligence and national security in the Washington bureau, from 1998 until retiring in November 2020. During his college years, he traveled throughout Asia and worked with UNICEF as a Shansi representative, of Oberlin College. He has a bachelor's degree in Asian Studies and received his master's degree in journalism from Columbia University. Drogin has won a number of awards during his career, including the Pulitzer Prize for Public Service, and two prizes for his book, "Curveball: Spies, Lies, and the Con Man Who Caused a War," a story of the Iraqi informant, who was a key source of false claims about Saddam Hussein's Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD). (en)
  • Bob Drogin is een Amerikaanse correspondent nationale veiligheid voor de Los Angeles Times. Hij is auteur van het in 2007 verschenen boek Codenaam Curveball, waarin het verhaal verteld wordt van de Iraakse informant , die door de CIA Curveball werd genoemd. De informatie die deze informant verstrekte aan de CIA lag ten grondslag aan de Amerikaanse invasie van Irak in 2003. Bob Drogin won verscheidene journalistieke prijzen, waaronder de befaamde Pulitzer-prijs. (nl)
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  • 1952-01-01 (xsd:gYear)
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  • Deputy bureau chief,Los Angeles Times, retired (en)
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  • B.A., Oberlin College, M.J., Columbia School of Journalism (en)
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  • Bob Drogin (en)
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  • Journalist, author (en)
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  • Deputy bureau chief, Los Angeles Times, retired (en)
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  • Bob Drogin is een Amerikaanse correspondent nationale veiligheid voor de Los Angeles Times. Hij is auteur van het in 2007 verschenen boek Codenaam Curveball, waarin het verhaal verteld wordt van de Iraakse informant , die door de CIA Curveball werd genoemd. De informatie die deze informant verstrekte aan de CIA lag ten grondslag aan de Amerikaanse invasie van Irak in 2003. Bob Drogin won verscheidene journalistieke prijzen, waaronder de befaamde Pulitzer-prijs. (nl)
  • Bob Drogin (c. 1952) is an American journalist and author. He worked for the Los Angeles Times, for nearly four decades. Drogin began his career with the Times as a national correspondent, based in New York, traveling to nearly every state in the United States. He spent eight years as a foreign correspondent, and as bureau chief in Manila and Johannesburg, before returning to the U.S. He covered intelligence and national security in the Washington bureau, from 1998 until retiring in November 2020. (en)
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  • Bob Drogin (en)
  • Bob Drogin (nl)
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  • Bob Drogin (en)
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