Raffi Khatchadourian | |
|---|---|
| Born | Long Island,New York, U.S. |
| Alma mater | Trinity College Columbia University |
| Occupation | Journalist |
| Known for | Investigating topics related toWikiLeaks, theIraq War,Tiversa, U.S. military experimenting and genocide |
Raffi Khatchadourian is an American journalist. He is well known for his investigative pieces on an array of topics such asWikiLeaks, theIraq War,Tiversa, U.S. military experimenting, and genocide. His long-form piece "Azzam the American," which appeared inThe New Yorker, is one of his most notable works.[1]It was published on January 22, 2007, and was nominated for aNational Magazine Award in Profile Writing.[1][2][3][4]
Khatchadourian was born inLong Island, New York.[5]He earned a Bachelor of Arts degree fromTrinity College inHartford, Connecticut.[6]He also earned an International Relations master's degree fromColumbia University.[6]
Khatchadourian began his journalism career inMoscow, where he worked at an English weekly calledThe Russia Journal.[6]While there, he worked as the chiefcopy editor and wrote news andeditorial articles.[6]
He has contributedfreelance work to a number of publications after returning from Moscow, includingThe Nation, theSan Francisco Chronicle,The Baltimore Sun,Condé Nast Traveler,Smithsonian magazine andSalon.[6]Khatchadourian spent time inUzbekistan,Kyrgyzstan andTajikistan in 2001 in order to report on U.S. military involvement inAfghanistan forThe Nation and theSan Francisco Chronicle.[6]
In 2003, prior to joining the staff atThe New Yorker, Khatchadourian wrote a five-segment piece forThe Village Voice on the construction of an oil pipeline throughAzerbaijan,Georgia andTurkey.[6][7][8][9][10][11]
Khatchadourian was a fellow at theInternational Reporting Project (IRP) in 2005.[1][6]The project, which is run by thePaul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS) atJohns Hopkins University inWashington, D.C., "provides opportunities for journalists to report internationally on critical issues that are under covered in the news media."[1][12]
Khatchadourian began working forThe New Yorker in 2003 as a staff fact-checker.[6]He wrote his first piece for the magazine, "Azzam the American," in 2007 and transitioned to a staff writer in 2008.[1][13]Since then, Khatchadourian has written a number of investigative pieces forThe New Yorker on a range of topics.
"Azzam the American" is the first piece Khatchadourian wrote forThe New Yorker, the year before becoming a staff writer for the magazine.[1][13]The piece was nominated for the Profile Writing category of the National Magazine Awards.[1][13]It investigated the story ofAdam Gadahn,Oregon-born U.S. citizen who joinedAl-Qaeda.[2][3]Gadahn became an English spokesperson for Al-Qaeda's media, serving as "translator, video producer and cultural interpreter," Khatchadourian reported.[2][3]
Although Khatchadourian did not speak with Gadahn himself, he offered an in-depth profile using a number of sources. He spoke to terrorism experts such asRandy Parsons, who was in charge of the Los Angeles F.B.I.'s counterterroism division from 2002 to 2006.[2]The article also cited people who knew Gadahn's family. Most importantly, though, Khatchadourian scoured through essays, videos and audio recordings Gadahn had made in order to learn more about him.[2]
In 2010, Khatchadourian wrote "No Secrets" forThe New Yorker. The investigative article profiledJulian Assange, the founder of WikiLeaks.[14]In the piece, Khatchadourian wrote that Assange wanted to be as transparent as possible concerning his work at WikiLeaks.[14]He captured this as he told Assange's story, from starting WikiLeaks to keeping an eye out for the next leak.[14]
Khatchadourian spent time with Assange, and his team at the time, in Iceland. They were working on a leak, code named Project B, regarding twoU.S. airstrikes in Baghdad, which took place on July 12, 2007.[14] The video revealed that, along with the intended targets, the airstrike killedSaeed Chmagh andNamir Noor-Eldeen, two war correspondents forReuters.[14] The leak was given the title Collateral Murder upon release.
Assange also revealed his own personal story to Khathcadourian. At the age of 16 he began hacking under the name Mendax, with a group called the International Subversives.[14]Khatchadourian also reported, from a meeting with the WikiLeaks founder on a bench inBryant Park after the release of Collateral Murder, that Assange was working on a new project: Project G.[14]
Another of Khatchadourian's investigative pieces forThe New Yorker, titled "Operation Delirium," shed light on U.S. military experimenting during theCold War. The article, written in 2012, focused on ColonelJames S. Ketchum, and his involvement with theEdgewood Arsenal human experiments.[15]Khatchadourian unveiled the extent to which a vast assortment of different chemicals were being tested on, often unknowing, U.S. soldiers.[15]The experiments were executed in an effort to create a viable form ofpsychochemical warfare.[15]
Ketchum told Khatchadourian about the experiments that took place at Edgewood. Soldiers were given drugs without any preparation or knowledge of what they were taking; they were studied, and then released without counselling or warning of potential effects.[15]Ketchum also told Khatchadourian of an experimenter at Edgewood Arsenal by the name of Dr. Van Murray Sim. Sim believed that the type of psychochemical testing they were involved in required subjects not to have any preconceived expectations.[15]He often gave unwitting people, including high-ranking officers, LSD, withoutinformed consent.[15]Despite disagreeing with Sim's methods, and struggling with his own conscience, Khatchadourian reported that Ketchum defended his work at Edgewood.[15]
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