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John F.
Burns is the longest-serving foreign correspondent in The
New York Times' history, having worked for more than 30
years on assignment in Africa, Asia, the Middle East, and
Europe. For many of those years, he has been the paper's
representative in countries and regions of the world that have
been the focus of world's attention — South Africa during
the last phases of apartheid; China during the Cultural
Revolution of the 1970's and its subsequent opening to the
world under the "open door" policy; the Soviet Union
during one of the harshest periods of the Cold War, the former
Yugoslavia during the wars in the early 1990's in Croatia and
Bosnia; Afghanistan during the period of the Soviet military
withdrawal, the rise of the Taliban, and the American-led
military campaign that ended Taliban rule there; and Iraq,
during the height of Saddam Hussein's repression, the war that
overthrew him, and its aftermath.
Burns
became the chief foreign correspondent of The New York
Times in April 2003. Before that, he covered the last six
months of Saddam Hussein's regime and the war to overthrow him
from a base in the Al Rashid and
Palestine
hotels in
Baghdad. Mr. Burns watched the bombing of Saddam Hussein's palaces
that began the American overthrow of Mr. Hussein from the roof
of the Palestine Hotel on March 20th 2003, and subsequently
went into hiding in
Baghdad
after escaping arrest by Saddam Hussein's secret police. When
American troops captured
Baghdad
, he served as bureau chief for the newspaper in
Baghdad
until July 1st 2007, covering every aspect of the war there
from a base in The New York Times' heavily-fortified
compound on the east bank of the Tigris river in Baghdad. After nearly five years in
Iraq, Burns has been named to a new post as the newspaper's London
bureau chief with effect from the summer of 2007.
Mr. Burns responsibilities in the newspaper’s coverage of
the war on terror began on Sept. 12th, 2001, when The
Times' executive editor, Howell Raines, appointed him as
bureau chief charged with directing the paper's coverage of
the military campaign that overthrew the Taliban government in
Kabul, first from a base in the Pakistani capital of
Islamabad, and later from the Afghan capital. Burns’
responsibilities in Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan were in
many respects a continuation of his assignment from September
1998 to September 2001 as the first Islamic Affairs
correspondent of The New York Times, a position that
entailed widespread travel in the Islamic world, much of it
focusing on the rise of Al Qaeda and its leader, Osama bin
Laden. In that position, Burns covered the attack on the USS
Cole in
Aden
harbor on Oct. 12 2000, an Al Qaeda-directed operation that
was the precursor to the attacks on the
World
Trade
Center
and the Pentagon 11 months later. Official probes into the
September 2001 attacks have established that much of the
intelligence that might have enabled the CIA and the FBI to
foresee and prevent the 9/11 attacks became available during
the investigation into the attack on the Cole, which received
its most intensive media coverage in Mr. Burns' reporting from
Yemen, and what he was able to establish about the Al Qaeda
links to that attack.
Mr. Burns'
foreign assignments for The New York Times have
included South Africa, from 1976 to 1980, and again in 1989
and 1990, including the period of the Soweto riots that began
the unravelling of apartheid, and the release from jail of
Nelson Mandela; the Soviet Union, from 1981 to 1984; including
the period of President Ronald Reagan's challenge to the
Soviet hegemony in Afghanistan and eastern Europe, and the
deaths of Soviet leaders Leonid I. Brezhnev and Yuri P.
Andropov; China, from 1984 to 1986; the period when Deng
Xiao-ping declared the "open door" policy that began
China's period of rapid economic growth; Canada, from 1986 to
1989, based in Toronto; Afghanistan from 1989 to 1991, and
again from 1994 to 2002; the wars in Croatia and Bosnia, from
1991 to 1994; the Indian subcontinent, based in Delhi, from
1994 to 1998; and Iraq, from 2002 to 2007. Mr. Burns joined The
Times in October 1975 as a member of the Metropolitan Desk
in
New York
.
In July
1986, Burns was imprisoned by the Chinese government on
charges of espionage. After an investigation, a trial was
averted when the Chinese deported him to
Hong Kong. The Chinese authorities subsequently apologized to The
Times, stating the charges had been false and concocted by
"bad elements" in the country's state security
police.
Among his many awards, Burns has won two Pulitzer prizes, in
1993 for his coverage of the siege and destruction of the
Bosnian capital of
Sarajevo, and again in 1997 for his coverage of the rise of the
Taliban in Afghanistan. He has been a nominee for the Pulitzer Prize on several
other occasions, and is also a dual winner, in 1979 and 1997,
of the George Polk award for foreign reporting, in Africa and Afghanistan. The Institute for the Study of Diplomacy, an association of
retired
U.S.
diplomats, awarded Mr. Burns the Edward R. Weintal Prize for
diplomatic reporting in 2005 for his coverage of the war in Iraq. In 2003, the Committee to Protect Journalists named him
winner of the Burton Benjamin Memorial Award, describing him
as "the eyes and ears for much of the American
public" for his reporting on the military campaign that
toppled the Hussein regime in The Times and on an array
of American television networks, including PBS's The
Newshour with Jim Lehrer, the CBS Evening News, and
the morning and evening news shows on ABC News, NBC and
CNN. He has been a frequent guests on the CNN shows hosted by
Wolf Blitzer and Anderson Cooper.
Before
joining The Times, Mr. Burns worked for The Toronto
Globe and Mail. From 1971 until 1975 he reported on the
life and politics of mainland
China
from his base in
Beijing, and from 1969 until 1971, he covered the office of the
Canadian prime minister in Ottawa, then
Pierre Trudeau, as chief parliamentary correspondent.
From 1967
until 1969, Mr. Burns was a reporter in
Toronto, covering crime, education and local politics. During his
summers in college, he worked at The Ottawa Citizen and
The Ottawa Journal. Burns’ family have lived since
the mid-1960's in
Vancouver,
British Columbia, where his parents settled in retirement. His father, a World
War II fighter pilot, served in the Royal Air Force from 1931
to 1966.
John Burns
was born in Nottingham,
England, on Oct. 4, 1944. He was educated at
Stowe School,
England, and
McGill
University
in Montreal. He also studied Russian at
Harvard
University, and Chinese at Cambridge
University. From 1998 until 1999, he held a visiting fellowship at
King's College, Cambridge, studying Islamic history and culture. In addition to Russian
and Chinese, he speaks French and German.
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