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Eric Schmitt: Eric Schmitt is a veteran national security correspondent for The New York Times, where he has reported on the U.S. military, intelligence community, and counterterrorism issues for more than three decades as part of a 40-year career at the newspaper. He has covered every major conflict involving the U.S. military since the 1991 Persian Gulf War and has reported extensively from Iraq, Afghanistan, Africa, and the Middle East, writing widely on security developments across the Middle East, South Asia, Africa, and Europe. Schmitt has shared in four Pulitzer Prizes for his reporting and is the co-author of Counterstrike: The Untold Story of America's Secret Campaign Against Al Qaeda. He began his journalism career covering local education at the Tri-City Herald in Kennewick, Washington. Schmitt holds a bachelor's degree in political science from Williams College, studied in Madrid, and was a journalism fellow at Stanford University. He was born in Minneapolis and raised in the San Francisco Bay Area. Sasha Ingber: Sasha Ingber hosts SpyCast, the International Spy Museum's flagship podcast on global intelligence, espionage, and covert operations. She is also the founder of HUMINT, where she explores the intelligence community through its people and the emotions that drive them. She has taken audiences inside a Chinese police station hidden above a ramen shop in New York, to a secret base in Ukraine where police officers were trained for the front, and to Qatar as hostage negotiations were underway. She was the national security correspondent for national TV network Scripps News, as well as a reporter at NPR, National Geographic, and Smithsonian. A Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting grantee, she has also told stories on the ground in Bangladesh, Iraq, and Cuba. She has been a guest on PBS NewsHour and The History Channel, and her reporting has been picked up by media outlets that include CNN, MSNBC, Breitbart, and Politico. Sasha holds a Master's degree in nonfiction writing from Johns Hopkins University. Before starting a career in journalism, she worked in the U.S. State Department, debunking disinformation after Russia illegally seized Crimea from Ukraine.