Hussain Abdul-Hussain
Hussain Abdul-Hussain is an Iraqi-Lebanese journalist and is the Washington Bureau Chief of Kuwaiti newspaper Al Rai.Biography
Hussain Abdul-Hussain worked for the United States Congress-funded Arabic TV, Alhurra, as a news producer. Prior to joining Alhurra, he worked as a reporter and later as editor for Beirut's The Daily Star . He was in Baghdad in April/May 2003 where he reported on the downfall of the Saddam Hussein regime. He has contributed articles to the New York Times, The Washington Post, The Christian Science Monitor, The International Herald Tribune, the USA Today and the Baltimore Sun and has appeared on CNN, MSNBC and the BBC. He often contributes editorials to Arabic daily Annahar of Lebanon, Egypt's Al-Ahram Weekly Supplement as well as Al-Ahram's Democracy Periodical, and Abu Dhabi's The National. He appears regularly on Arabic satellite TV stations.
Abdul-Hussain is a former Visiting Fellow with Chatham House, London.
Abdul-Hussain is a graduate of the American University of Beirut where he studied history of the Middle East with a minor in political studies.Works
Hussain Abdul-Hussain is a ranked book reviewer on Amazon
He is one of the creators and translators of the Samir Kassir website. Selected works
His published Op-Eds in UK publications include:His published Op-Eds in US Newspapers include:The Washington Post
- Two Faces of the Arab Street
- Are the Leaving? An Email from Baghdad
- Meanwhile: Fearing a return of the bad old days
- Learning about the Enemy
The USA Today
The Baltimore Sun
And in Arab English publications- The End of the American Superpower
- None but Us to Blame
- Syrian propaganda is behind stories of Lebanese terror in Syria, and some journalists are playing along
- Does Tehran know what's up?
- Hezbollah should share its power
- My way or the highway
The National (Abu Dhabi)
- What the US Learnt from Iraq... and the Arab World Didn't
- In war or peace, heroic Syria leads…from the rear
NOW Lebanon
- The Cyber Bully
- The Hersh Hype
Briefings, Lectures and Panel Discussions
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