Judith Miller is a former reporter for The New York Times and author of four books on the Middle East, biological weapons and the Holocaust. For information on her prosecution for refusing to reveal sources to federal prosecutors, see the news section of this Web site or the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press.




In this section:






Germs: Biological Weapons and America's Secret War
by Judith Miller, William Broad, Stephen Engelberg
Simon & Schuster, 2001




God Has Ninety-Nine Names: A Reporter's Journey Through a Militant Middle East
by Judith Miller
Simon & Schuster, 1996




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Best of the Web -- I've Got a Secret
Wall Street Journal, June 25, 2008

Judy Speaks at Symposium Regarding the Shield ... By JAMES TARANTO Last night found us at a Manhattan Institute symposium, where two distinguished journalists--Judith Miller, formerly of the New York Times, and Gabriel Schoenfeld, of Commentary--debated whether there  . . . [more]

The Other Terrorism
Manhattan Institute > City Journal, Spring 2008

by Judith Miller -- Post-9/11, Spain’s Basque terrorists are on the run—but still a threat. The heart, if not the soul, of Spain’s capital, Madrid, is its bustling financial district. Thousands crowd daily into the skyscrapers that overlook the district’s main square.  . . . [more]

WHAT I LEARNED AT 'ANTI-JIHAD U'
New York Post, May 2, 2008

by Judith Miller -- LAST month, I visited one of the largest Islamic schools in the Middle East. It's run by the US military - for detainees in Iraq. The suspected insurgents also participate in discussion programs about Islam - and are being trained to be carpenters,  . . . [more]

FBI VS. THE NYPD: Behind the Latest Flap
New York Post, March 25, 2008

by Judith Miller -- The latest apparent flap between the FBI and the NYPD turns on a factor that the intelligence world sometimes shares with the real-estate business: What matters is location, location, location. [more]

Anti-terrorism in paradise: Lacking funds and manpower, Bratton's war on terror is based on the principle of sharing.
Los Angeles Times, July 15, 2007

by Judith Miller (Note: This article is adapted from a longer version appearing in City Journal. See above.) THREE TIME zones, 3,000 miles and a cultural galaxy apart, New York and Los Angeles — along with Washington — face a common threat: They are prime targets of Islamic  . . . [more]

From the Shores of Tripoli
The National Interest Online, May 1, 2007

By Judith Miller -- THE BUSH Administration can point to only one undeniable non-proliferation "success" so far in its tenure: Libya’s decision to renounce WMD in December 2003. But the administration that so adroitly pushed Libya to abandon unconventional weapons has been  . . . [more]

Book Review: George Tenet's At the Center of the Storm
The New York Sun, May 11, 2007

Review by Judith Miller -- How could the nation's intelligence agencies, with their multibilliondollar secret budgets, their thousands of employees in over 100 countries across the globe, their vast networks of all-seeing eyes and ears in the skies, and clusters of informants  . . . [more]

Commentary: When Activists Are Terrorists
Wall Street Journal, May 3, 2007

By Judith Miller -- Did the New York Police Department spy on peaceful groups and citizens trying to exercise their constitutional right to protest the renomination of President Bush at the Republican National Convention in the summer of 2004? This is what civil liberties  . . . [more]

Opinion: Killing Again (Rwanda)
The New York Sun, January 29, 2007

By Judith Miller -- Words can kill. The historic verdict of an international court concluded in 2003 that three Rwandan press executives were guilty of genocide for having helped incite the 1994 massacre of some 800,000 Rwandans in 100 days, most of them members of the Tutsi  . . . [more]

Opinion: Website for the germ-obsessed
Los Angeles Times, January 13, 2007

By Judith Miller -- PLANNING A TRIP to Vancouver Island? You might want to know that Cryptococcus gattii, a pathogenic fungus that invades the central nervous systems of humans and other animals, has recently infected about 100 people there, six of whom have died. Do you know  . . . [more]