The Inside Story of the U.S.-Israeli Covert Relationship: Money, Mossad, and the CIA (1991)
Andrew Myles Cockburn (/ˈkoʊbɜrn/ koh-burn; born January 7,
1947) is an
English journalist who has lived in the
United States for many years.
Born in
London in 1947, Cockburn grew up in
County Cork, Ireland. His father was socialist author and journalist
Claud Cockburn. His mother,
Patricia Evangeline Anne (née Arbuthnot), was the granddaughter of
British colonial administrator
Henry Arthur Blake and
British politician George Arbuthnot; she had written an autobiography,
Figure of Eight. Cockburn was educated at
Glenalmond College,
Perthshire, and
Worcester College, Oxford.
Cockburn has two brothers,
Alexander Cockburn and
Patrick Cockburn, who are also journalists, and two half-sisters. One sister,
Sarah, was best known as the mystery writer
Sarah Caudwell.
The other sister,
Claudia, worked on disability and married
Michael Flanders, half of the well-known performance double-act:
Flanders and Swann; the two children of this marriage are the journalists
Laura Flanders and
Stephanie Flanders, his half-nieces.
He married
Leslie Corkhill Redlich in
San Francisco in
1977 and together they have three children,
Chloe Frances Cockburn (April 3,
1979),
The O.C. and
House M.D. actress
Olivia Wilde (née
Olivia Jane Cockburn) and
Charles Philip Cockburn (
January 31,
1993). The Cockburns are distantly "related by cousinly marriages" to
Sir George Cockburn, 10th Baronet, who ordered the
Burning of Washington in
1814.
Cockburn has written numerous books and articles, principally about national security. He has also produced numerous documentary films, principally in partnership with
Leslie Cockburn as well as co-producing the
1997 thriller
The Peacemaker, starring
George Clooney and
Nicole Kidman, for Dreamworks. After an early career in
British newspapers and television, he moved to the United States in 1979. His film
The Red Army, produced for
PBS in
1981, was the first in depth report on the serious deficiencies of
Soviet military power and won a
Peabody Award. In
1982, he published the book "
The Threat --
Inside the
Soviet Military Machine" (
Random House), which examined the same topic in greater depth. He subsequently published many articles on the subject of
U.S. and Soviet military power as well as lecturing at numerous military bases, foreign policy forums, and colleges and innumerable television shows. The collapse of the
Soviet Union, and subsequent revelation that his analysis of the Soviet military had been correct rendered his subject otiose. He then began covering middle eastern subjects, including the
1991 documentary on the after-effects of the first Gulf war,
The War We
Left Behind, which he co-produced for PBS with Leslie Cockburn. In 2009 he and Leslie Cockburn produced
American Casino, a feature length documentary on the
Wall Street crash.
New Yorker critic
David Denby called it "A terrific documentary
... Everything is connected: the movie embodies chaos theory for social pessimists."
Apart from his books he has written for
National Geographic,
Los Angeles Times,
The London Review of Books,
Smithsonian,
Vanity Fair,
Harper's Magazine, CounterPunch,
Condé Nast Traveler,
New York Times, and the
Dungarvan Observer. He is currently
Washington Editor of Harper's Magazine.
Cockburn's most recent book is Rumsfeld: His
Rise, Fall, and Catastrophic
Legacy (subtitled
An American Disaster in the UK edition)
. In the New York Times, reviewer
Jacob Heilbrunn called it "perceptive and engrossing." He is also known for writing "
21st Century Slaves" for National Geographic. It was a groundbreaking article that shed light on the practice of modern-day slavery.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andrew_Cockburn
Leslie Corkill Redlich Cockburn (/ˈkoʊbərn/ koh-bərn; born
September 2,
1952) is an
American writer and filmmaker who has covered a wide variety of international stories in almost every part of the globe.
In
1987 Cockburn began producing and reporting documentaries for
PBS Frontline in collaboration with her husband
Andrew Cockburn. In
Guns,
Drugs, and the
CIA,[16] (1987) she interviewed, on camera,
Anthony Poshepny, aka "
Tony Poe," a legendary covert operations officer who had supervised the CIA's secret war in
Northern Laos during the
1960s and early
1970s. In the interview, Poshepny stated that the CIA had supplied air transport for the heroin shipments of their local ally,
General Vang Pao, the only such on-the-record confirmation by a former
CIA officer concerning agency involvement in the narcotics trade.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leslie_Cockburn
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