Josh Rogin | |
---|---|
Nationality | American |
Education | BA International Affairs George Washington University Elliott School of International Affairs [1] [2] Sophia University [3] |
Occupation | Journalist |
Employer | The Washington Post |
Known for | Washington Post Columnist for foreign policy and national security [4] CNN political analyst [5] |
Spouse | Ali Rogin (née Weinberg) [6] |
Children | 1 (Anne) |
Parent(s) | Sharon and Michael Rogin [7] |
Family | Max Weinberg (father-in-law) [8] Jay Weinberg (brother-in-law) [9] |
Josh Rogin is an American journalist currently serving as a foreign policy columnist for the Global Opinions section of The Washington Post and a political analyst for CNN. [10] [11] He is author of the book Chaos Under Heaven: Trump, Xi, and the Battle for the 21st Century. [12]
Rogin is Jewish and was raised in Bensalem, Pennsylvania in the suburbs of Philadelphia. [13] [14] [15] [16] He graduated with a B.A. in international affairs from the George Washington University's Elliott School of International Affairs. [17] [18] After graduation, he worked as a journalist covering foreign policy and national security for Newsweek , The Daily Beast , Foreign Policy , Bloomberg View , The Washington Post , Federal Computer Week , Asahi Shimbun of Japan, and Congressional Quarterly . [19] [20] [21] [22] [23] [24] [25] He is currently a foreign policy columnist for The Washington Post's Global Opinions section and a political analyst for CNN.
He is author of the book, Chaos Under Heaven: Trump, Xi, and the Battle for the 21st Century, published in March 2021. [26] [27] [28]
Rogin describes his politics as "neoliberal with a constructivist streak." [29]
Rogin was a 2008-2009 National Press Foundation's Paul Miller Washington Reporting Fellow and a 2009 military reporting fellow with the Knight Center for Specialized Journalism. [30] In 2011, Rogin was a finalist for the Livingston Award for Young Journalists and the 2011 recipient of the Interaction Award for Excellence in International Reporting. [31]
In April 2020, Rogin published a column about diplomatic cables written by US diplomats in 2018 that reported safety and staffing concerns the diplomats had expressed after three visits in late 2017 and early 2018 to the Wuhan Institute of Virology. [32] The cables reported that the WIV scientists claimed they did not have proper staffing and training to safely operate the Institute's Biosafety Level 4 (BSL-4) lab. The US diplomats also warned that the Institute was performing risky research on bat coronaviruses in their labs. [33] The cables were seen by some US officials to support a hypothesis that the Wuhan Institute of Virology's research may have resulted in a lab accident that caused the outbreak of the COVID-19 worldwide pandemic. [34] [35]
In 2014, Rogin was credited with recording and revealing statements made in a private meeting of the Trilateral Commission by US Secretary of State John Kerry, who posited that Israel could become an "apartheid state." [36] Invitees had all previously agreed that they would not record or report on speakers' remarks without permission. [37] Rogin posted an article on The Daily Beast , which forced Kerry to issue a letter of apology to Jewish and Israeli leaders. [38] [39] Rogin originally stated that he received the information from an attendee's recording. [40] He later admitted that he made the recording himself. [41] Rogin ultimately defended himself by stating he was not an invitee and therefore was not bound by the off the record agreement. [42]
Rogin was physically assaulted in 2013 by comedian Dan Nainan, after tweeting disparagingly about Nainan's standup performance at a charity comedy event at the DC Improv. Nainan saw Rogin's tweets after his set, approached Rogin in the back of the club, and punched him twice in the face in front of several witnesses. Nainan was arrested and later pleaded guilty to assault. [43] [44]
In 2016, he married PBS Newshour foreign affairs producer Ali Weinberg (daughter of Max Weinberg and sister of Jay Weinberg) in a Jewish ceremony in Washington D.C. [45] [46] [47]
Margaret Carlson is an American journalist, political pundit, and an opinion columnist for Bloomberg News. She is known for being the first female columnist for Time magazine. She was a regular panelist for CNN's Capital Gang from 1992 until its cancellation in 2005.
John Phillips Avlon is an American journalist and political commentator. He is a senior political analyst and anchor at CNN and was the editor-in-chief and managing director of The Daily Beast from 2013 to 2018. Avlon was previously a columnist and associate editor for The New York Sun and chief speechwriter for former Mayor of New York City Rudy Giuliani.
The Hill is an American newspaper and digital media company based in Washington, D.C., that was founded in 1994.
Dana Timothy Milbank is an American author and columnist for The Washington Post. He has written books about Al Gore & George Bush, Glenn Beck, American politics, and the Republican Party. He has appeared as a pundit on various shows.
Mohammad Javad Zarif Khansari is an Iranian career diplomat and academic. He was the foreign minister of Iran from 2013 until 2021 in the government of Hassan Rouhani. During his tenure as foreign minister, he led the Iranian negotiation with P5+1 countries which produced the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action on 14 July 2015, lifting the economic sanctions against Iran on 16 January 2016. On 25 February 2019, Zarif resigned from his post as foreign minister. His resignation was rejected by Ali Khamenei and he continued as foreign minister.
The Daily Beast is an American news website focused on politics, media, and pop culture. Founded in 2008, the website is owned by IAC Inc.
Sarah Elizabeth Cupp is an American television host, political commentator, and writer. In August 2017, she began hosting S.E. Cupp: Unfiltered, a political panel show, co-hosted by Andrew Levy, on HLN and later CNN.
Eli Jon Lake is an American journalist and the former senior national security correspondent for The Daily Beast and Newsweek. Currently, he is a columnist for the Bloomberg View. He has also contributed to CNN, Fox, C-SPAN, Charlie Rose, the I Am Rapaport: Stereo Podcast and Bloggingheads.tv.
Lois Romano is a national journalist who was an editor, reporter and columnist for The Washington Post and Politico.
David Weigel is an American journalist. He works for Semafor. Weigel previously covered politics for The Washington Post,Slate, and Bloomberg Politics and is a contributing editor for Reason magazine.
Ari Naftali Melber is an American attorney and Emmy-winning journalist who is the chief legal correspondent for MSNBC and host of The Beat with Ari Melber.
Marie Elizabeth Harf is a liberal political commentator for the Fox News Channel and former deputy campaign manager for policy and communications for the Rep. Seth Moulton (D-Mass.) presidential campaign. She served as the Senior advisor of Strategic Communications to U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry at the United States Department of State, leading the Iran nuclear negotiations communications strategy. Harf also was Acting Spokesperson and Deputy Spokesperson of the State Department.
Josh Campbell is an American correspondent with CNN, former U.S. intelligence community official, and military veteran. He serves as an adjunct senior fellow and national security policy researcher with the Center for a New American Security.
Shi Zhengli is a Chinese virologist who researches SARS-like coronaviruses of bat origin. Shi directs the Center for Emerging Infectious Diseases at the Wuhan Institute of Virology (WIV). In 2017, Shi and her colleague Cui Jie discovered that the SARS coronavirus likely originated in a population of cave-dwelling horseshoe bats in Xiyang Yi Ethnic Township, Yunnan. She came to prominence in the popular press as "Batwoman" during the COVID-19 pandemic for her work with bat coronaviruses. Shi was included in Time's 100 Most Influential People of 2020.
The Wuhan Institute of Virology, Chinese Academy of Sciences is a research institute on virology administered by the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS), which reports to the State Council of the People's Republic of China. The institute is one of nine independent organisations in the Wuhan Branch of the CAS. Located in Jiangxia District, Wuhan, Hubei, it was founded in 1956 and opened mainland China's first biosafety level 4 (BSL-4) laboratory in 2018. The institute has collaborated with the Galveston National Laboratory in the United States, the Centre International de Recherche en Infectiologie in France, and the National Microbiology Laboratory in Canada. The institute has been an active premier research center for the study of coronaviruses.
Katie Benner is an American reporter for The New York Times covering the United States Department of Justice.
Since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, there have been efforts by scientists, governments, and others to determine the origin of the SARS-CoV-2 virus. Most scientists agree that, as with many other pandemics in human history, the virus is likely derived from a bat-borne virus transmitted to humans via another animal in nature or during wildlife trade such as that in food markets. Many other explanations, including several conspiracy theories, have been proposed. Some scientists and politicians have speculated that SARS-CoV-2 was accidentally released from a laboratory. This theory is not supported by evidence.
The COVID-19 lab leak theory, or lab leak hypothesis, is the idea that SARS-CoV-2, the virus that caused the COVID-19 pandemic, came from a laboratory. This claim is highly controversial; most scientists believe the virus spilled into human populations through natural zoonosis, similar to the SARS-CoV-1 and MERS-CoV outbreaks, and consistent with other pandemics in human history. Available evidence suggests that the SARS-CoV-2 virus was originally harbored by bats, and spread to humans from infected wild animals, functioning as an intermediate host, at the Huanan Seafood Market in Wuhan, Hubei, China, in December 2019. Several candidate animal species have been identified as potential intermediate hosts. There is no evidence SARS-CoV-2 existed in any laboratory prior to the pandemic, or that any suspicious biosecurity incidents happened in any laboratory.
In April 2021, more than three hours of audiotape was leaked from a seven-hour interview between economist Saeed Leylaz and Iranian foreign minister Mohammad Javad Zarif. The taped conversation was connected to an oral history project, titled "In the Islamic Republic, the military field rules," that documents the work of then-president Hassan Rouhani and his government. The tape was obtained by the London-based news channel Iran International and publicized by The New York Times. Zarif did not dispute the authenticity of the leaked tape, but questioned the motive. Iran International noted that Zarif's claim was "not very credible."
Daniel Nainan is an American stand-up comedian. He is known for performing ethnic jokes involving his South-Asian ethnicity.
Josh Rogin, Washington D.C. Metro Area Columnist at Bloomberg View and Political Analyst at CNN
A graduate of George Washington University's Elliott School of International Affairs
Josh holds a B.A. in international affairs from the George Washington University and studied at Sophia University in Tokyo, Japan
Josh Rogin is a CNN political analyst, as well as a columnist on foreign policy and national security for Bloomberg View.
the father and mother of the groom, Sharon and Michael Rogin
the bride's dad is Max Weinberg, the drummer for Bruce Springsteen's band
Mr. Weinberg said he has been going through old papers. "I saved everything, every essay, every letter from my children." He and Becky have two, Ali and her brother, Jay.
Josh Rogin is a CNN political analyst, as well as a columnist on foreign policy and national security for Bloomberg View.
I e-mailed Rogin this morning with a question: Had he taped the dialogue, or taken notes on it? For those non-Jews out there, or for my apostate Jewish readers (some of my best friends are apostate Jews), it would be a violation of the law and spirit of Yom Kippur to do either thing. Rogin e-mailed me back the following: "I attended the talk and wrote the story from notes I jotted down when I got home. I assumed a recording device would not be kosher."
A "mazel tov" to MAX WEINBERG, 65 (most famous as Bruce Springsteen's drummer). On April 16, his daughter, ALI WEINBERG, 30ish, wed Bloomberg View/CNN political analyst JOSH ROGIN, 35ish. The bride is a digital journalist for ABC News. Perhaps because Ali's mother isn't Jewish, a rabbi didn't preside—but the couple married under a chuppah and the traditional Jewish wedding blessings, etc. were said by the officiant.
Josh Rogin, the pride of Bensalem, Penn.
A graduate of George Washington University's Elliott School of International Affairs
with Newsweek Daily Beast Correspondent Josh Rogin
Josh Rogin is a former Bloomberg View columnist.
The Daily Beast has hired Josh Rogin, a senior staff writer with Foreign Policy and author of The Cable blog.
After teaching English in Japan, I got hired as a news assistant for the Japanese newspaper Asahi Shimbun and dispatched to the Pentagon. While there, I could be reliably depended on to change the subject of any press conference to U.S.-Japan relations, a foil Don Rumsfeld availed himself of liberally. After two years, I hit my head on the "rice paper ceiling" and moved on to Federal Computer Week magazine. The rest is history.
A new NBC News report on the Wuhan Institute of Virology (WIV) -- the lab from where the coronavirus pandemic may have originated -- is inconsistent and misleading, according to a thread of tweets from Washington Post columnist Josh Rogin.
He was a 2008-2009 National Press Foundation's Paul Miller Washington Reporting Fellow, 2009 military reporting fellow with the Knight Center for Specialized Journalism and the 2011 recipient of the InterAction Award for Excellence in International Reporting. He hails from Philadelphia and lives in Washington, D.C.
Rogin was a 2011 finalist for the Livingston Award for Young Journalists and the 2011 recipient of the Interaction Award for Excellence in International Reporting
Yesterday, Josh Rogin, of the Washington Post, published a column that appeared in the paper's Global Opinions section, but contained bombshell new reporting. Per Rogin, in early 2018, officials from the US Embassy in Beijing repeatedly visited a laboratory in Wuhan where researchers were studying coronaviruses in bats, and their possible transmissibility to humans. Embassy staff were so concerned about safety issues they said they'd observed on their visits that they sent two warnings back to the State Department, urging the US government to give the lab support. In the first of the cables, which Rogin obtained, officials warned that the lab's work on coronaviruses "represented a risk of a new SARS-like pandemic."
Two years before the novel coronavirus pandemic upended the world, U.S. Embassy officials visited a Chinese research facility in the city of Wuhan several times and sent two official warnings back to Washington about inadequate safety at the lab, which was conducting risky studies on coronaviruses from bats. The cables have fueled discussions inside the U.S. government about whether this or another Wuhan lab was the source of the virus — even though conclusive proof has yet to emerge.
"We understand that as early as January 2018 Department officials issued warnings about the WIV, including the serious shortage of appropriately trained technicians needed to safely manage research on potentially deadly zoonotic coronaviruses. While the exact origin of the 2019 novel coronavirus has not yet been determined and there is no evidence linking the virus to the WIV, it is important to understand how the administration responded to these warnings. This is not academic: unless we fully understand what happened we will be unable to effectively act and lead the world to prevent the next global pandemic," said Murphy and Markey.
U.S. Embassy officials warned in January 2018 about inadequate safety at the Wuhan Institute of Virology lab and passed on information about scientists conducting risky research on coronavirus from bats, The Washington Post reported Tuesday. Those cables have renewed speculation inside the U.S. government about whether Wuhan-based labs were the source of the novel coronavirus, although no firm connection has been established. The theory, however, has gained traction in recent days. Gen. Mark Milley, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said Tuesday afternoon, "It should be no surprise to you that we have taken a keen interest in that and we've had a lot of intelligence take a hard look at that. I would just say at this point, it's inconclusive, although the weight of evidence seems to indicate natural, but we don't know for certain."
On Monday, I reported that Daily Beast reporter Josh Rogin had been accused of secretly recording Secretary of State John Kerry's remarks at last week's Trilateral Commission event in Washington. Rogin's reporting on those remarks, however he obtained them, led to great frustration at the State Dept. -- Kerry drew fire from Jewish organizations for saying that Israel could become "an apartheid state"
In regard to the Trilateral Commission event, Rogin refuses to say who provided him with the tape recording: "I don't comment on my sourcing," he told POLITICO. "I didn't break any rules or agreements in the reporting of this article." (Rogin was not invited to the Commission event, and therefore not bound to the privacy agreement.)
The US secretary of state, John Kerry, has apologised for warning that Israel risked becoming an "apartheid state" if it did not reach a peace deal with the Palestinians, following a barrage of criticism in America. According to reports, his remarks were apparently recorded after a reporter, who was not invited to the event and so not bound by the meeting's non-attribution agreement, managed to get in.
Rogin actually didn't do anything wrong in taping the event. Because he was not invited, he was not bound by the off-the-record agreement made by other guests. But given that he didn't do anything wrong, you have to wonder why it took him so long to come clean on his sourcing. In his first report, Rogin attribued[ sic ] his knowledge of Sec. Kerry's remarks to "an attendee." In subsquent[ sic ] reports, including the "apartheid" report, he attributed it to a tape "obtained by The Daily Beast." As Rogin disclosed on Friday, the attendee was himself, and the tape was his own: "I... attributed Kerry's remarks to 'an attendee' because there I was", he wrote, adding: "Once I got home and had a chance to listen to the tapes, I sourced Kerry's remarks to a recording obtained by The Daily Beast." Yet back on Monday, when I asked Rogin about Nye's accusation that he taped the remarks, Rogin said, "I don't comment on my sourcing. I didn't break any rules or agreements in the reporting of this article." He refused to say whether or not he'd taped the event, and stipulated that it was simply an allegation, not a fact.
Comedy headliner Dan Nainan -- a professional comedian who in the past has performed for President Obama -- got into a skirmish with Newsweek Daily Beast Correspondent Josh Rogin. Rogin sent out several Tweets during Nainan's set.
Nainan approached Rogin after his act and punched him in the face, pushed him, then took two more swings (only one of which connected), according to Rogin. Nainan denied that, telling The Post's Reliable Source he was simply standing up for the other comedians on the stage that night. Nainan was arrested and charged with simple assault.
The Jewish ceremony was held in the Meridian Center's garden, which in the late afternoon simply radiated with red and yellow tulips lining the chuppah.
Married Last Night: Bloomberg's Josh Rogin and ABC's Ali Weinberg. Her dad, Max Weinberg, and his entire E Street Band performed at the reception at D.C.'s Meridian House.
NewsHour executive producer Sara Just today named award-winning journalist Ali Rogin the nightly news broadcast's newest foreign affairs producer.