Jim Hoagland
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Jimmie Lee "Jim" Hoagland (born January 22, 1940) is an American journalist and two-time recipient of the Pulitzer Prize. He is an associate editor, senior foreign correspondent, and columnist for The Washington Post.
Born in Rock Hill, South Carolina, Hoagland is a graduate of the University of South Carolina. He attended graduate school at both the University of Aix-en-Provence in France and Columbia University in New York.
Writing for the Washington Post, he won the Pulitzer Prize for International Reporting in 1971 "for his coverage of the struggle against apartheid in the Republic of South Africa." Again for the Post he won the Pulitzer Prize for Commentary in 1991 "for searching and prescient columns on events leading up to the Gulf War and on the political problems of Mikhail Gorbachev."
Hoagland is also known for notably backing now disgraced Ahmad Chalabi of the Iraqi National Congress as an assest to the United States' war in Iraq. Hoagland has since changed his position on Chalabi and the information of WMD's.
Hoagland and the author/journalist Jane Stanton Hitchcock were married in 1995.
[edit] Quotations
- "The United States is engaged in a shadow war that must now be the central priority for this president and his administration for every day of his term." -- The Washington Post, 2001