Personal lifeGlass was born in Los Angeles, and has dual US/UK citizenship. He received a bachelor's degree in philosophy from the University of Southern California, then undertook graduate studies at the American University of Beirut. He was married to Fiona Ross for seventeen years. He has three children and two stepdaughters. Professional lifeGlass began his career in 1973 with ABC News in Beirut, where he covered the Arab-Israeli war in Syria and Egypt with Peter Jennings. He became the network's chief Middle East correspondent, a position he held for ten years, before deciding to freelance. Since then, he has worked for CNN, ABC, and the BBC; in print, he has written for The Independent, Christian Science Monitor, TIME magazine, The Guardian, Chicago Daily News, The Daily Telegraph, The Sunday Telegraph, New Statesman, Times Literary Supplement, London Review of Books, Granta, Harper's Magazine, and The London Magazine. He is a frequent lecturer on Middle East and international affairs in Britain and the United States. He is the Books Editor of the Frontline Club Newsletter in London. Notable storiesGlass's one-hour documentary on Lebanon, Pity the Nation: Charles Glass's Lebanon, was broadcast in 20 countries, prompting the London Evening Standard critic to call it "one of the best and most heart-rending documentaries [he had] ever seen." Iraq: Enemies of the State, made for the BBC, was broadcast around the world six months before Saddam Hussein's invasion of Kuwait. He also made Stains of War (1992), and The Forgotten Faithful (1994), which looked at the situation of the Palestinian Christians who have left the West Bank. In 1988, he revealed that Saddam Hussein had developed biological weapons. In 1991, he was the only American television correspondent to enter northern Iraq to cover the Kurdish rebellion from start to finish. In 1992, he took a hidden camera to East Timor, occupied by Indonesia, and filed a report that caused a U.S. Senate committee to vote for a suspension of military aid to Indonesia. In 1993, he covered the Serb attacks against Bosnia. [3] He won an Overseas Press Club award in 1976 for his radio reporting of the deaths of Palestinians at the Beirut refugee camp at Tel el Zaatar; and he has shared the British Commonwealth and Peabody Awards for documentary films. Works
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