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Greg Myre

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Greg Myre

Greg Myre is the international editor for digital news at NPR. Previously, he was a foreign correspondent from 1987 to 2007 with The New York Times and the Associated Press and spent more than a decade based in the Middle East. He has covered major events throughout the region, including the first Gulf War in 1991, the rise of the Taliban in Afghanistan, Pakistan’s political turmoil, Iraq under Saddam Hussein, and America’s wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. He was based in Jerusalem from 1999 to 2007, covering the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. This  last assignment was also the basis for the 2011 book he co-authored with his wife Jennifer Griffin, called This Burning Land: Lessons from the Front Lines of the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict

Education:
B.A. at Yale University

Countries of Expertise:
Afghanistan, Iraq, Israel, Pakistan, Palestinian Territories

Issues of Expertise:
US Foreign Policy, Terrorism, Peace Process, Middle East Affairs, Media, Globalization, Asian Middle East Policy, Arab-Israeli Relations

The Latest from Greg Myre

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Gaza, the Land of the Recurring Crisis
Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Gaza, the Land of the Recurring Crisis

    The last five years of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict could be summed up in one word: Gaza.

    Israel’s lethal raid on the flotilla attempting to deliver aid to Gaza is part of a recurring theme that goes like this: Gaza wallows in dysfunction. Tensions steadily build. A confrontation erupts. Every major crisis between the Israelis and the Palestinians in recent years has revolved around Gaza—the overcrowded, impoverished strip of sand squeezed between Israel and the Mediterranean.

    June 10, 2010