
Greg Myre
National Security Correspondent at NPR
NPR national security correspondent currently reporting from the Middle East. Used to roam Africa, Asia and and Russia as well.
Articles
-
1 week ago |
wrvo.org | Miles Parks |Greg Myre |Mara Liasson
As tensions continue to escalate between Israel and Iran, President Trump is now signaling an openness for more U.S. military involvement. We discuss what that might look like and how it is dividing the MAGA faithful. This episode: voting correspondent Miles Parks, national security correspondent Greg Myre, and senior national political correspondent Mara Liasson. This podcast was produced by Bria Suggs and edited by Lexie Schapitl. Our executive producer is Muthoni Muturi.
-
1 week ago |
wfdd.org | Greg Myre |Scott Detrow
0:00 There was an error loading the media player. Support quality journalism, like the story above, with your gift right now.
-
2 weeks ago |
kpbs.org | Greg Myre
Ukraine's recent attack on Russian warplanes was audacious, innovative and unprecedented. Ukraine's stealthy strike was carried out with small drones, hidden in trucks parked near several Russian air bases. Yet Operation Spider's Web, orchestrated by the SBU intelligence service, was also part of a recurring theme: Ukraine keeps inventing new ways to wage war with drones, and regularly catches Russia by surprise. "The Ukrainians are the ones innovating and trying these daring and creative attacks.
-
3 weeks ago |
kpbs.org | Greg Myre |Megan Pratz
President Trump enacted a travel ban on citizens from a dozen countries Wednesday, including Afghanistan, where U.S. troops were stationed for nearly two decades. Even though the president's travel ban applies to Afghanistan, it does include an exception. Afghans who served with the U.S. during the war can still pursue what's known as a Special Immigrant Visa.
-
1 month ago |
boisestatepublicradio.org | Greg Myre
President Trump has been threatening to abandon peace efforts in the Russia-Ukraine war. And he isn't saying much about the Israel-Hamas fighting either. Yet Trump is quick to tout international economic agreements. On his recent Middle East trip, the president touted business deals and investments with the wealthy states of Saudi Arabia, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates and said the region is now being defined by "commerce, not chaos.""Where it exports technology, not terrorism.
Try JournoFinder For Free
Search and contact over 1M+ journalist profiles, browse 100M+ articles, and unlock powerful PR tools.
Start Your 7-Day Free Trial →X (formerly Twitter)
- Followers
- 8K
- Tweets
- 7K
- DMs Open
- Yes

By land, by air and by sea: the many ways Ukraine carries out unprecedented drone attacks against Russia. https://t.co/XpQzU787It

Trump likes to frame foreign policy as a business deal to be worked out with friends. But it will be hard to escape diplomacy that involves confronting rivals. https://t.co/9PGHBwQoKr

To work as planned, the Golden Dome 'would likely involve thousands of small satellites capable of attacking a missile in the moments after it launches.' A good look at how complicated this would be. @gbrumfiel https://t.co/xJSVV7pHCj