, 2011 Sanger is chief
Washington correspondent for
The New York Times and one of the newspaper's senior writers. In a 42-year career at the paper, he has reported from New York, Tokyo, and Washington, specializing in foreign policy, national security, and the politics of globalization. In 1982, after joining
The New York Times, Sanger soon began specializing in the confluence of economic and foreign policy. In 1986 Sanger played a major role in the team that investigated the causes of the
Space Shuttle Challenger disaster. The team revealed the design flaws and bureaucratic troubles that contributed to the disaster and won the 1987
Pulitzer Prize for national reporting. Throughout the '80s and '90s, he wrote extensively about how issues of national wealth and competitiveness came to redefine the relationships between the
United States and its major allies. He was correspondent and then bureau chief in
Tokyo for six years, traveling widely in Asia. He wrote some of the first pieces describing North Korea's nuclear weapons program, the rise and fall of Japan as one of the world's economic powerhouses, and China's emerging role. In 1994, he returned to Washington, as Chief Washington Economic Correspondent, and covered a series of global economic upheavals, from Mexico to the
Asian economic crisis. In March 1999, he was named a senior writer, and White House correspondent later that year. In 2004, Sanger was awarded the Weintal Prize for diplomatic reporting for his coverage of the Iraq and Korea crises. He also won the Aldo Beckman prize for coverage of the presidency. In both 2003 and 2007, Sanger was awarded the Merriman Smith Memorial Award for coverage of national security strategy. He also shared the
American Society of Newspaper Editors' top award for deadline writing in 2004, for team coverage of the Columbia disaster. In 2007,
The New York Times received the DuPont Award from the
Columbia Journalism School for
Nuclear Jihad: Can Terrorists Get the Bomb?, a documentary featuring him and colleague
William J. Broad, and their investigation into the
A.Q. Khan nuclear proliferation network. Their revelations in the
Times about the network became a finalist for the
Pulitzer Prize. In 2011, Sanger was part of another team that was a Pulitzer Prize finalist for International Reporting for their coverage of the
Japanese tsunami and
nuclear disaster. In 2012, Sanger broke the story that President Obama early in his presidency had secretly commissioned the
Stuxnet cyberattacks on Iranian nuclear facilities; his reporting was depicted in the documentary film
Zero Days (2016). In October 2006, he was named Chief Washington Correspondent. He was a member of a Pulitzer-winning team that wrote about the
Clinton administration's struggles to control exports to China. In a March 2016 interview, Sanger questioned
Donald Trump, who was running for the Republican nomination for President of the United States, about his views on foreign policy. Sanger pressed Trump on the idea that his worldview was one of 'America First', a term first used in association with Trump in a report by the former U.S. diplomat
Armand V. Cucciniello III in
USA Today. Trump "agreed with a suggestion that his ideas might be summed up as 'America First'." His campaign quickly adopted the slogan as the cornerstone of Trump's foreign policy. The phrase was used throughout the Trump administration. == Other activities ==