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R. Jeffrey Smith

Managing Editor, National Security  The Center for Public Integrity

Smith worked for 25 years in a series of key reporting and editorial roles at The Washington Post, including national investigative editor, national security correspondent, national investigative correspondent, and a foreign staff bureau chief based in Rome. In 2006, he won the Pulitzer Prize for Investigative Reporting, along with two colleagues at the Post, for articles on House Majority Leader Tom DeLay and lobbyist Jack Abramoff. Smith was also a finalist with other Post reporters for the Pulitzer Prize in international reporting in 1999 (from Kosovo), and a finalist with others for the Pulitzer Prize in national reporting in 2005 (about Abu Ghraib and military prisoner abuse). In his first ten years at the Post, Smith wrote about defense, intelligence and foreign policy matters, including policymaking at the State Department, Pentagon, and White House. He also focused on conflict and terrorism in the Middle East; politics and military affairs in Asia; and arms proliferation. Prior to that, he was a senior writer for the News and Comment section of Science Magazine where he won a National Magazine Award in 1986 for writing about arms control.

Presidential candidates compete in debates to show how muscular they are, even when clear solutions are often not available.

Data gleaned from counter-terrorism centers has been mostly useless, says Senate report

The secretary of defense says that Washington is not sure where all of the deadly Syrian stockpile is

Faux neutrality in the East China Sea

New F-35 program deputy gives a candid assessment of flaws in the most expensive weapon in Pentagon history.

There's widespread anger on Capitol Hill about a security breach at a vault for nuclear weapons-grade uranium.

How an 82-year-old has upended the lax regulation of the U.S. nuclear weapons establishment.

Democratic platform offers hints at how Obama would handle defense in second term.

The top lawmakers on the Senate Armed Services committee call exports by Pratt & Whitney's Canadian branch "enormously troubling"

The more things change, the more they stay the same in U.S. planning for nuclear war.

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