Greg Miller

chief correspondent international investigations The Washington Post

Greg Miller is Chief Correspondent, International Investigations, at The Washington Post. He is one of The Post’s most accomplished reporters, with an extraordinary record in breaking some of the most important international and national-security stories of the last two decades. Since becoming an International Investigations correspondent in 2020, Greg has been central to stories on a wide range of reporting targets, including the war in Ukraine; the CIA’s clandestine role in turning Ukraine’s intelligence services into potent allies against the Kremlin; the Indian spy service’s involvement in assassination plots in North America; the King of Jordan’s use of shell companies to hide his ownership of a collection of oceanfront villas in California; and the extraordinary path of a Russian spy who gained admission to one of the most prestigious universities in Washington.

Previously, as a national security reporter, Greg unearthed stories at the core of The Post’s coverage of Russia’s interference in the 2016 campaign, and then drew from reporting around the newsroom in writing The Apprentice: Trump, Russia and the Subversion of American Democracy (2018). He has twice won the Pulitzer Prize as part of teams: in 2014 for Public Service for The Post’s stories about U.S. surveillance programs exposed by former intelligence contractor Edward Snowden, and in 2018 for National Reporting for the work on Russian interference. Earlier, Greg spent 16 years as a reporter for the Los Angeles Times, where he covered business and technology in Los Angeles, Orange County and Silicon Valley before moving to Washington to cover national security.

He grew up in California, and graduated from the University of California, Davis, with a degree in economics before earning a master’s in journalism at Stanford.

read more