Craig S. Smith
Craig S. Smith (born October 13, 1955, in
Spokane, Washington) is an American
journalist and former executive of ''
The New York Times''. Until January, 2000, he wrote for ''
The Wall Street Journal'', most notably covering the rise of the religious movement
Falun Gong in
China. He joined ''
The New York Times'' as
Shanghai bureau chief in 2000 and wrote extensively about the practice of
harvesting organs from executed prisoners in
China. In 2002 he moved to
Paris. He has reported for the ''Times'' in more than forty countries, from
Iraq to
Israel to
Kyrgyzstan. He has covered several [https://www.gettyimages.co.uk/detail/news-photo/journalist-craig-smith-is-escorted-by-palestinian-militants-news-photo/56538887?adppopup=true conflicts], including the 2001 invasion of Afghanistan, the 2003 war in Iraq and the 2006 Israeli-Lebanese war. He also covered the 2005 unrest in the French
banlieues. In 2008, he joined Hong Kong billionaire
Richard Li Tzar Kai's financial news venture as executive editor and subsequently became senior vice president of Li's Pacific Century Group. He rejoined The New York Times in late 2011 as China managing director,
founding and running the New York Times' first foreign language site, cn.nytimes.com. In late 2016 he returned to the U.S. as a writer at large for the Times, focused on Canadian stories. He retired from the Times in 2018 and now writes for the Times and other publications about artificial intelligence. He served as a
special Government employee for the
National Security Commission on Artificial Intelligence and is host of the podcast [http://www.eye-on.ai Eye on AI], which is rated number 2 among AI-related podcasts by Feedspot.
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