Nick Paton

Nick Paton Walsh Chief International Security Correspondent Nick Paton Walsh is a multiple Emmy Award-winning Chief International Security Correspondent for CNN based in London. Latest Nick Paton Walsh is a multiple Emmy Award-winning Chief International Security Correspondent for CNN. Based in CNN’s London bureau, Paton Walsh reports on conflict, global security and intelligence stories across TV and CNN Digital. With decades of experience reporting from warzones around the world and deep knowledge and contacts across the international security and intelligence communities, Paton Walsh reports on and provides informed context and analysis of key global security-related issues in the studio and out in the field. Paton Walsh previously served as the network’s International Security Editor, delivering a range of stories from the battlefields of Ukraine, Iraq, Syria and Afghanistan, as well as covering global terrorism and the ongoing threat of Covid-19. He has played a pivotal role in CNN’s coverage of Russia’s ongoing invasion of Ukraine, and in 2023 was part of the CNN team which won an Emmy Award for Outstanding Live Breaking News Coverage for their reporting on this story. Paton Walsh covered the fall of Kabul to the Taliban in 2021 and led an investigation into the deaths of over 170 Afghans and Americans at Abbey Gate, outside the capital’s airport. During the pandemic in 2020 he reported from Brazil, Iran and Coventry, England, and broke an exclusive on what China knew in the opening weeks of the pandemic. In recent years he has also reported extensively from Venezuela, Brazil and Haiti on the political, social and environmental crises. Since joining CNN in 2011, Paton Walsh has been at the center of some of the network’s most award-winning coverage, particularly his work in Syria and Iraq. His reporting on the Turkish incursion into Syria helped earn the network a 2020 Emmy Award in the Outstanding Breaking News Coverage category. He received the David Kaplan Award from the Overseas Press Club in 2018 for his reporting on the fall of ISIS; two 2018 Emmy Awards for ‘The Fall of Raqqa’; two Edward R. Murrow Awards in 2013 and one in 2018; three Peabody Awards for CNN’s coverage in Syria (2012), for its ISIS reporting (2016) and for the network’s coverage of the fall of ISIS in Iraq and Syria in 2018. He has won Eppy Awards for his work on plastic pollution and police violence in El Salvador. Additionally, his script-writing in Syria and Afghanistan won an Emmy in 2013 for Outstanding Writing. In 2019, Paton Walsh reported from inside Venezuela undercover as its crisis unfolded, revealing key details and videos about the plot to assassinate Nicolas Maduro with commercial drones, and the hugely profitable drug routes that run north through the embattled country, enriching its military and elite. In Iran, he interviewed foreign minister Javad Zarif, whose threat of “all-out war” if Iran was attacked made headlines across the world. He also reported on the Turkish incursion into Kurdish held areas of Syria and broke a series of stories on the shelved US withdrawal from Syria. Additionally, Paton Walsh reported from Dagestan in the aftermath of the 2013 Boston bombings, interviewing the family of the Tsarnaev brothers and establishing some of the first links to militants there. Additionally, Paton Walsh has covered many key environmental stories as well as natural disasters in the Caribbean and Philippines. In 2019 he reported on the fires raging across the Amazon from one of the worst-affected states in Brazil. Paton Walsh was previously based in Pakistan in March 2011. He was subsequently the network’s first correspondent reporting live from Abbotabad covering the death of Osama Bin Laden, where he obtained exclusive video from inside the al-Qaeda leader’s compound and broke the story that a courier’s cell phone signal had led American troops there. Previously he spent several years working in Asia for the UK’s Channel Four News, focusing on Afghanistan where he gained rare access to a tiny and isolated American outpost near the Pakistani border - COP Keating - which was overrun by insurgents, and covered the 2009 presidential election crisis. While Asia and foreign affairs correspondent at Channel Four News he secured a rare and exclusive interview with the Russian alleged arms dealer Viktor Bout, while his team’s reports on alleged human rights abuses in Sri Lanka at the end of the civil war led to their forced deportation from the country. From 2002 to 2006, Paton Walsh was the Moscow Correspondent for the Guardian newspaper during the rise of Vladimir Putin. He reported on both the Dubrovka theatre siege and the Beslan school hostage crisis, alongside the revolutions in Georgia, Ukraine, and Kyrgyzstan and developments from the troubled North Caucasus. Paton Walsh won the British Press Awards’ Young Journalist of the Year in 2000, aged 22. He won Amnesty International’s Gaby Rado Award for a reporter at the start of their career in 2006 for his work in the former Soviet Union, and their television award for his work in Sri Lanka in 2010.

89%

The Daily's Verdict

This author has a mixed reputation for journalistic standards. It is advisable to fact-check, scrutinize for bias, and check for conflicts of interest before relying on the author's reporting.

Bias

88%

Examples:

  • A raging sore for the Kremlin, and a reminder of both how Putin came to power and his limits on it.
  • Dead and absent sons are hard to stomach, but if they come with worse security at home, it can be a critical problem for the Kremlin’s grip on Dagestan.
  • That was over 10 years ago. Nothing has improved since, and a younger generation have the lurid propaganda of ISIS’s failed caliphate of 2014 to supercharge their fantasies.
  • The perpetrators of Beslan had complex histories that spoke of how the Chechen wars had ignited an entire region.

Conflicts of Interest

95%

Examples:

  • A poor, febrile pocket of Russia on the Caspian Sea, in places devoutly Muslim, where the war in Ukraine will have left many empty places at the dinner table and fomented contentiousness against the Kremlin and its often corrupt local proxies.
  • The attacks on Christians in Dagestan on Sunday echoed the militants’ most ghastly crime - the siege of the school in Beslan, in 2004, where an Orthodox Christian area was targeted and more than 300 people died, most of them children.

Contradictions

75%

Examples:

  • A poor, febrile pocket of Russia on the Caspian Sea, in places devoutly Muslim, where the war in Ukraine will have left many empty places at the dinner table, and fomented contentiousness against the Kremlin and its often corrupt local proxies.
  • Dead and absent sons are hard to stomach, but if they come with worse security at home, it can be a critical problem for the Kremlin’s grip on Dagestan.
  • ][Multiple people are dead, including law enforcement officers, after attacks at places of worship in Dagestan][The death toll from attacks on churches and synagogues in Russia's Dagestan region rose to 20 on Monday]
  • The perpetrators of Beslan had complex histories that spoke of how the Chechen wars had ignited an entire region.

Deceptions

85%

Examples:

  • Russia entered its third year of war in Ukraine with an unprecedented amount of cash in government coffers, bolstered by a record $37 billion of crude oil sales to India last year.
  • The Kremlin has never been richer – thanks to a US strategic partner.

Recent Articles

Dagestan: 20 Killed, 46 Injured in Coordinated Attacks on Churches and Synagogues

Dagestan: 20 Killed, 46 Injured in Coordinated Attacks on Churches and Synagogues

Broke On: Monday, 24 June 2024 In Dagestan, Russia, at least 20 people have been killed and 46 injured in coordinated attacks on churches and a synagogue. Orthodox priests were among the fatalities, with attackers setting fire to an icon and two churches. Five attackers were also killed.
Russia's War in Ukraine: Unprecedented Cash and Increased Crude Purchases Amid Bipartisan Support for International Security Assistance

Russia's War in Ukraine: Unprecedented Cash and Increased Crude Purchases Amid Bipartisan Support for International Security Assistance

Broke On: Tuesday, 20 February 2024 Russia is entering its third year of war in Ukraine with an unprecedented amount of cash in government coffers. India increased its purchases of Russian crude by over 13 times its pre-war amounts, according to the analysis by CREA. The Senate approved a spending package for international security assistance for Ukraine, Israel and Taiwan but Speaker Mike Johnson has balked at sending it to the House floor.