Peter Lampert Bergen (born December 12, 1962) is a British and American-based United States journalist, author, and producer who is
CNN's national security analyst, a vice president at
New America, a professor at
Arizona State University, and the host of the Audible podcast In the Room with Peter Bergen.
Bergen has written
eight books and edited three books. Three of the books were New York Times bestsellers, four of the books were named among the best non-fiction books of the year by the Washington Post, and have been translated into 24 languages. He produced the first television interview with
Osama bin Laden in 1997, which aired on CNN.[2]
Bergen has been nominated four times for
Emmy Awards – in 1994 (CNN), 2001 (National Geographic), 2006 (CNN), and 2018 (CNN).[citation needed]
Background
Peter Lampert Bergen was born in
Minneapolis and grew up in London,[3] the son of Donald Thomas Bergen[4][5] and Sarah Elizabeth (née Lampert) Bergen. Her grandfather, Leonard Lampert, founded the Lampert Lumber Company.[6] Peter Bergen was raised in his family's
Roman Catholic faith.[4][5] He attended
Ampleforth College in North Yorkshire before receiving
an open scholarship to
New College, Oxford, in 1981, where he graduated with a degree in
modern history. Bergen is married to the documentary director/producer Tresha Mabile. They have two children.[7]
He is a Professor of Practice at the School of Politics and Global Studies at
Arizona State University, where he is the co-director of the Center on the Future of War,[9] a
research fellow at Fordham University's Center on National Security,[10] and CNN's national security analyst.[11]
Bergen is on the editorial board of Studies in Conflict & Terrorism, the leading scholarly journal in the field, and has testified before multiple congressional committees, including the
U.S. House of RepresentativesHomeland Security Committee and the U.S.
Senate Foreign Relations Committee. He is a member of the Homeland Security Experts Group.[14] Bergen is the chairman of the board of the Global Special Operations Foundation, which is a non-profit advocating for the interests of special operations forces.[15] He is the founding editor of the
Coronavirus Daily Brief.
He was a fellow at New York University's Center on Law & Security between 2003 and 2011,[16] was a contributing editor at The New Republic for many years,[17] and editor of the South Asia Channel and South Asia Daily,[18] online publications of Foreign Policy magazine from 2009 to 2016.[19]
Bergen was the recipient of the 2000 Leonard Silk Journalism Fellowship and was the Pew Journalist in Residence at the School of Advanced International Studies at Johns Hopkins University in 2001 while writing Holy War, Inc.[23]
His third book, The Longest War: The Enduring Conflict between America and Al-Qaeda (2011), a New York Times bestseller,[24] gave an overview of the
War on Terror and was named by the Guardian[25] and Newsweek[26] as one of the key books about terrorism in the past decade. The Longest War also won the Washington Institute's Gold Prize for best book about the Middle East.[27] and was named by Amazon,[28]Kirkus[29] and Foreign Policy[30] as one of the best books of 2011.
Bergen's 2012 New York Times bestseller[31] was Manhunt: The Ten-Year Search for Bin Laden From 9/11 to Abbottabad.[32] The Washington Post named Manhunt one of the best non-fiction books of 2012,[33] and The Guardian named it one of the key books on Islamist extremism.[34] It was the 2012 Sunday Times (UK) Current Affairs Book of the Year. The book was awarded the Overseas Press Club Cornelius Ryan Award for best non-fiction book of 2012 on international affairs.[35] The book was the basis of the HBO documentary film, Manhunt: The Search for Bin Laden,[36] which premiered at the
Sundance Film Festival and won the Emmy award for Outstanding Documentary in 2013.[37] Bergen was Executive Producer of the film.[36] He was awarded the Stephen Ambrose History Award in 2014.[38]
Bergen co-edited, with Katherine Tiedemann, Talibanistan: Negotiating the Borders Between Terror, Politics, and Religion, a collection of essays about the Taliban that was published by Oxford University Press in 2013.[39] He co-edited, with
Daniel Rothenberg, Drone Wars: Transforming Conflict, Law, and Policy, published by Cambridge University Press in 2014.[40]
Bergen has worked as a correspondent and producer for the
National Geographic Channel,[44]Discovery Channel, HBO, Showtime, and CNN Films.[45] He co-produced, with Tresha Mabile, the
National Geographic Channel documentary, American War Generals (2014).[46] Bergen and Mabile produced CNN Films' Legion of Brothers, which premiered at Sundance in January 2017.[47] It was released in theaters in June 2017. It was nominated for an Emmy for Outstanding Politics and Government documentary in 2018.[48] In 2020, together with the producers of Homeland, he produced the Showtime documentary, The Longest War, which documented the CIA's long involvement in Afghanistan.
On May 2, 2016, the five-year anniversary of the
death of Osama bin Laden, CNN aired the documentary We Got Him: President Obama, Bin Laden, and the Future of the War on Terror.[49]
In addition to interviewing President
Barack Obama in his first sit-down interview in the
Situation Room, Bergen also conducted the first in-depth interview with the architect of the bin Laden raid, Admiral
William H. McRaven, as well as interviewing senior administration officials including former Secretary of State
Hillary Clinton.[citation needed]
Four of Bergen's books have been made into documentaries for CNN, HBO and National Geographic. The documentaries based on Holy War, Inc. and The Osama bin Laden I Know were nominated for Emmys in 2001 and 2006.[22] Bergen was a producer of those films. Manhunt was the basis of the HBO documentary film, Manhunt,[36] which premiered at the Sundance Film Festival and won the Emmy Award for Outstanding Documentary in 2013.[37] Bergen was Executive Producer of the film.[36] HBO adapted United States of Jihad for the 2016 documentary film, Homegrown: The Counterterror Dilemma.[42]
In 1997, as a producer for CNN, Bergen produced bin Laden's first television interview, in which he declared war against the United States for the first time to a Western audience.[50] In 1994, he won the Overseas Press Club Edward R. Murrow award for best foreign affairs documentary for the CNN program Kingdom of Cocaine,[51] which was also nominated for an Emmy.[52]
Bergen co-produced the CNN documentary, Terror Nation, which traced the links between Afghanistan and the bombers who attacked the World Trade Center for the first time in 1993.[53] The documentary, which was shot in Afghanistan during the civil war there and aired in 1994, concluded that the country would be the source of additional anti-Western terrorism.[54] From 1998 to 1999, Bergen worked as a correspondent-producer for CNN.[55] He also produced documentaries on the Clinton administration, the Cali Cartel, the 1994 Republican takeover of Congress, and advances in AIDS research. He was program editor for CNN Impact, a news magazine co-production of CNN and TIME, from 1997 to 1998.[56]
Previously, he worked for CNN Special Assignment as a producer on a wide variety of international and U.S. national stories, including the first network interview with white supremacist author,
William Luther Pierce. From 1985 to 1990 he worked for ABC News in New York. In 1983, he traveled to Pakistan for the first time with two friends to make a documentary about the Afghan refugees fleeing the Soviet invasion of their country. The subsequent documentary, Refugees of Faith, was shown on Channel 4 (UK).
In 2015,
Seymour Hersh criticized Bergen for "view[ing] himself as the trustee of all things Bin Laden"[80] after Bergen wrote a piece for CNN.com disputing what he called Hersh's revisionist account in the London Review of Books about the raid that killed bin Laden. Bergen wrote that Hersh's account was "a farrago of nonsense that is contravened by a multitude of eyewitness accounts, inconvenient facts and simple common sense."[81]
Books
Author
The Cost of Chaos: The Trump Administration and the World. New York, NY: Penguin. 2022.
The Rise and Fall of Osama Bin Laden. New York, NY: Simon and Schuster. 2021.
Understanding the New Proxy Wars. New York, NY: Oxford University Press. 2022. (Co-editor with Candace Rondeaux, Daniel Rothenberg, and David Sterman)
Drone Wars: Transforming Conflict, Law, and Policy. New York, NY: Cambridge University Press. 2014. (Co-editor with Daniel Rothenberg)
Talibanistan: Negotiating the Borders Between Terror, Politics, and Religion. New York, NY: Oxford University Press. 2013. (Co-editor with Katherine Tiedemann)
In the Footsteps of Osama bin Laden, CNN, 2006.[89] Producer. Nominated for 2006 Emmy for Best News Documentary and named Best Documentary of 2006 by the Society of Professional Journalists.[90] Based on Bergen's book The Osama bin Laden I Know.
2012 Cornelius Ryan Award, Overseas Press Club, for Manhunt. Best non-fiction book on international affairs.[96]
2011 Gold Prize, Washington Institute for Near East Policy, for The Longest War. Best book on the Middle East.[97]
2008 National Magazine Award nomination for a story on extraordinary rendition, which was part of the series "Torture Hits Home" by Mother Jones.[citation needed]
2006 Emmy Award nomination for Outstanding Continuing Coverage of a News Story—Long Form for
CNN's In the Footsteps of Bin Laden. 28th Annual News & Documentary Emmy Award nominations.
2006 Best Documentary, Society of Professional Journalists, for
CNN's In the Footsteps of Bin Laden.[98]
2002 Headliner Award for Attacks on America and Their Aftermath as part of CNN's Investigation Team.[99]
2001 Emmy Award nomination for Outstanding Individual Achievement in a Craft: Research for Holy War, Inc., a National Geographic documentary.[100]
2001 Leonard Silk Journalism Fellowship, Century Foundation, for Holy War, Inc..[101]
2001 Pew Journalist-in-Residence, School of Advanced International Studies, Johns Hopkins University.[102]
1997 Joan Shorenstein Barone award for Washington Reporting.[103]
1997 National Headliner Award for
CNN's Democracy in America series.[103]
1997 Livingston Award finalist for
CNN's War on the Cocaine Cartel.
1994 Emmy Award nomination for Outstanding Individual Achievement in a Craft: Writers for
CNN's Kingdom of Cocaine.[104]
1994 Edward R. Murrow Award, Overseas Press Club, for Kingdom of Cocaine.[105]
^"Osama bin Laden Fast Facts". CNN. August 30, 2013.
Archived from the original on April 24, 2014. Retrieved July 11, 2023. 1997 – In his first interview with Western media, bin Laden tells Peter Bergen that the United States is 'unjust, criminal and tyrannical.' (Updated 12:27 PM EDT, Tue April 27, 2021)
^Biography. PeterBergen.com. Retrieved November 19, 2014.