experts
Kim Ghattas
Nonresident Senior Fellow

about


Kim Ghattas is no longer with the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.

Kim Ghattas was a nonresident senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. She is the author of Black Wave: Saudi Arabia, Iran and the Forty Year Rivalry that Unraveled Culture Religion and Collective Memory in the Middle East. She was previously a public policy fellow at the Woodrow Wilson Center for International Scholars from April to September 2017. Ghattas writes regularly for various publications including the Atlantic and was formerly an international affairs correspondent for the BBC. 

She most recently covered the 2016 U.S. presidential campaign for the BBC. Between 2008 and 2013, she was the BBC's State Department correspondent, travelling regularly with the U.S. Secretary of State. She wrote a New York Times best-selling book titled The Secretary: A Journey with Hillary Clinton From Beirut to the Heart of American Power.

Before moving to Washington, she was a Middle East correspondent for the BBC and the Financial Times, based in Beirut for ten years. She was part of an Emmy-Award-winning BBC team covering the Lebanon-Israel conflict of 2006. She covered Syria, Iraq, and Saudi Arabia extensively, as well Iran and Pakistan more recently. Ghattas serves on the Board of Trustees of the American University of Beirut.


education
BA, American University of Beirut
languages
Arabic, English, French

All work from Kim Ghattas

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47 Results
event
Reverberations of Multiple Crises: What to Expect in 2023
December 7, 2022

The Malcolm H. Kerr Carnegie Middle East Center will be holding its sixth annual conference on December 7–8, 2022, covering global political and economic issues, the main purpose of which is to anticipate what will happen in 2023.

In The Media
in the media
Biden’s Commitment to Press Freedom Faces a Test

When President Joe Biden travels to Saudi Arabia, Israel, and the Palestinian territories in July, he should keep two names in his mind at every step: Jamal Khashoggi and Shireen Abu Akleh. Both spoke truth to power, and both were killed in the course of their work as journalists.

· June 27, 2022
event
Post-elections: What does the future hold for Lebanon?
May 25, 2022

The panel is scheduled for Wednesday, May 25 at 16:00 Beirut time, and will feature contributions from Amer Bisat, Verena El Amil, Lama Fakih, Kim Ghattas and Ziad Majed.

  • +3
In The Media
in the media
Bin Laden’s Secret Letters. Testing Times for Lebanon.

From Beirut, Kim Ghattas reports on just how difficult life has become for the majority of its citizens and what this week’s election result might mean for this struggling nation and the problems it faces.

· May 20, 2022
In The Media
in the media
Europe Mulls Oil Ban, Russia’s Victory Day, and US-Saudi Relations

For various reasons countries like Saudi Arabia, Israel, and the UAE have felt like they had to hedge their bets and try to maintain a neutral stance.

· May 6, 2022
In The Media
in the media
What a Decade-Old Conflict Tells Us About Putin

But one event is missing from these analyses, an episode that combines political and emotional aspects, and helped crystallize Putin’s distrust of the West, his own sense of vulnerability, and his ultimate decision to return as Russia’s president: the 2011 NATO-led intervention in Libya that resulted in the violent death of the country’s eccentric dictator Muammar Gaddafi.

· March 6, 2022
In The Media
in the media
Lebanon In Crisis

Local Lebanese politicians are incapable or unwilling to come together to reform the country, to reform its institutions, to reform its politics and its economy. But I would put it in bigger terms and say that they're unwilling to do anything that would undermine their own grip on power

· December 22, 2021
event
Navigating a Turbulent Future? What to Expect in 2022
December 8, 2021

The Malcolm H. Kerr Carnegie Middle East Center will be holding its fifth annual conference on Wednesday, December 8, and Thursday, December 9, 2021, to delve deeper into what to expect in 2022.

  • +28
In The Media
in the media
Iran Feels Cornered by the Biden Administration

All of this regional activity is happening with the U.S. quietly coordinating in the background, encouraging some moves while discouraging or ignoring others (such as the overtures to Assad), but overall engaging in much more diplomacy across the region ahead of the nuclear talks with Iran that resumed this week after a five-month hiatus.

· December 2, 2021
In The Media
in the media
What The Loss of Freedom Feels Like

On days when I despair at the state of Lebanon, or the future of Hong Kong, I think of the Berlin Wall. For 40 years, those living in its shadow, on either side, could not imagine a life beyond the division it enforced, even while many strove to bring it down. Until, one day, the wall fell.

· October 22, 2021