Andrea Koppel
Andrea Koppel is an award winning, internationally renowned journalist
with more than two decades experience covering many of the biggest
stories and most important newsmakers in the U.S. and around the world.
For the last 14 years Koppel worked for CNN as a foreign correspondent
in posts like Japan and China and traveled the globe with 3 secretaries
of state and two presidents as the network’s Diplomatic Correspondent.
In December 2003 Koppel – then eight months pregnant – was the first to
secure a coveted, exclusive interview with Libyan leader Muammar
Qaddafi in which he publicly announced his country would shut down its
program to develop weapons of mass destruction. Koppel spent 10 days in
Libya -- much of that time as the only US journalist allowed in --
reporting on Qaddafi’s surprising decision and educating viewers about
Libya.
During her career Koppel secured numerous other exclusive interviews
with world leaders such as China’s former President Jiang Zemin before
the handover of Hong Kong in 1997 and President Lee Teng-hui, after he
became Taiwan’s first democratically elected president.
Over the years Koppel also reported extensively on Arab-Israeli peace
talks between 1998-2006 including the Wye River, Shepherdstown and Camp
David II negotiations.
In October 2000 Koppel was among a small group of journalists invited
to accompany then Secretary of State Madeleine Albright on her historic
visit to North Korea -- the highest ranking US official to visit the
North since the end of the Korean War.
Following the 9/11 attacks Koppel joined then Secretary of State Colin
Powell during his high stakes diplomatic mission to Pakistan and
Afghanistan just weeks before the US bombing campaign of Afghanistan.
Koppel joined CNN in 1993 as the network’s Tokyo correspondent and was
quickly promoted in 1995 to become CNN’s Beijing Bureau Chief. As a
mandarin-Chinese speaking journalist Koppel provided rare insight into
this complex country and its culture. Over several years she reported
from Hong Kong, Taiwan, South Korea and more than half of China’s
provinces and autonomous regions and covered a wide variety of
economic, social and political stories including the demise of the
country’s cradle to grave social safety net. In 1996 Koppel won a
prestigious Gracie Allen award for her documentary “Daughters of the
Revolution” on Chinese women in the wake of the communist revolution.
In 1993 -- in order to raise awareness about Ethiopia’s impending
drought and its estimated 1 million AIDS orphans -- Koppel paid her own
way to travel to West Africa to film those stories herself. She later
wrote and produced news pieces about these issues for CNN and
non-profit organizations.
Most recently Koppel also demonstrated her knowledge of American
politics and domestic issues during her 18-month tenure as the
network’s Capitol Hill correspondent.
Before joining CNN, Koppel worked at WPLG-TV in Miami where she won an
Emmy award for her news series Haiti: After the Coup about the plight
of Haitians following the coup of then President Jean Bertrand
Aristide.
Over the years Koppel has consistently set herself apart from her peers
with in-depth reporting and enlightening interviews with world leaders,
politicians, dissidents and social activists.


