Claudia Rosett is a journalist-in-residence with the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, and head of its Investigative Reporting Project. She has appeared before five U.S. House and Senate Committees and Subcommittees to testify on U.N.-related corruption. Her work on Oil-for-Food earned her the 2005 Eric Breindel Award and the Mightier Pen award.
Currently based in Washington, DC, Rosett has reported from Asia, the former Soviet Union, Latin America and the Middle East. She writes a column on foreign policy for Forbes.com; has contributed to a wide range of publications, including
The Wall Street Journal, The
New York Times,
The Philadelphia Inquirer,
USA Today,
Commentary,
The New Republic and
The Weekly Standard; and makes frequent guest appearances on TV and radio.
From 1984-2002, Rosett was a staff writer for
The Wall Street Journal, serving as a member of the
Journal's editorial board in New York (1997-2002); as a reporter and then bureau chief of
The Wall Street Journal's Moscow bureau, covering the former Soviet Union (1993-1996); and as editorial-page editor of
The Asian Wall Street Journal (1986-1993), covering Asia, based in Hong Kong. She worked as editor of the Journal's daily Bookshelf column, based in New York (1984-1986), and reported free-lance from Chile (1981-1982).
In recent years she has reported from places as diverse as Lebanon, Cyprus, and China, and written on issues involving the United Nations, foreign dissidents, and tyrants who in various ways threaten the democratic world. Her blog,
The Rosett Report, appears on Pajamas Media.
For her on-site coverage of China's 1989 Tiananmen Square uprising, Ms. Rosett won an Overseas Press Club Citation for Excellence. Her work has included editorializing about global crises in emerging markets in the late 1990s; on-the-scene reporting of the 1994-1996 war in Chechnya, and the 1992 collapse of the Soviet-installed regime in Kabul. In 1994 she broke the full story of North Korean labor camps in the Russian Far East, reporting from the camps.
Rosett holds a B.A. from Yale University (1976), an M.A. in English Literature from Columbia University (1979) and an M.B.A. from the University of Chicago Graduate School of Business (1981).