Susan B. GlasserEditor in Chief

Susan Glasser is editor in chief of Foreign Policy, the magazine of global politics, economics, and ideas. A longtime foreign correspondent and editor for the Washington Post, Glasser joined Foreign Policy in 2008 and has been spearheading the magazine’s ambitious expansion in print and online at ForeignPolicy.com. During her tenure, the magazine has won numerous awards for its innovative coverage, including three digital National Magazine Awards, and was recently honored for online general excellence by the Overseas Press Club.
Glasser spent four years as co-chief of the Post's Moscow bureau and covered the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq for the Post in the immediate aftermath of 9/11 before returning to Washington, where she edited the Post’s weekly Outlook section and led its national news coverage. Together with her husband, New York Times White House correspondent Peter Baker, she wrote Kremlin Rising: Vladimir Putin's Russia and the End of Revolution. Glasser previously worked for eight years at the Capitol Hill newspaper Roll Call, where she rose to be the top editor. A graduate of Harvard University, Glasser lives in Washington with Baker and their son.
Latest Articles
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Feature
Sergei Lavrov and the blunt logic of Russian power.
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Interview
An exclusive interview with Russia's top diplomat.
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Dispatch
Iran's president meets the press.
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Feature
Hillary Clinton, the blind dissident, and the art of diplomacy in the Twitter era.
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Interview
An exclusive interview with the secretary of state.
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Argument
Putin's reelection strategy: Blame the world for everything.
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Argument
Washington has a long tradition of misreading Moscow. As Putin teeters, it’s worth recalling George Kennan, the best Kremlinologist America ever had.
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Argument
Nine years ago, I drove into Iraq one spring morning. As we leave it's worth recalling: After all the angry commissions and self-serving memoirs, the war was always more complicated than it seemed.
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