Cell phones link Pakistan to U.S. embassy attack
CBS News: Insurgents who attacked U.S. Embassy in Kabul called Pakistani intelligence operatives before and during assault
David Martin has been CBS News' national security correspondent, covering the Pentagon and the State Department, since 1993. In that capacity, he has reported virtually every major defense, intelligence and international affairs story for the "CBS Evening News," as well as for other broadcasts, including "60 Minutes" and "48 Hours." He also contributed to "60 Minutes Wednesday."
During the invasion of Afghanistan and the war in Iraq, Martin's in-depth knowledge of how the State Department, intelligence community and military operate, both on the battlefield and in Washington positioned him as the "big picture" reporter for CBS News. Utilizing his own sources and reports from CBS News correspondents in the region and around the world, as well as in Washington, he explained and assessed the military's strategies and operations for viewers.
Martin broke several significant stories before and during the Iraq war. He was the first to report on the opening night of the war, that the U.S. was launching a strike on a palace bunker in southern Baghdad in an attempt to take out Saddam Hussein. Martin also broke the story of the military's "shock and awe" strategy for its initial strike on Baghdad. During a trip to Iraq in May 2003, he was the first journalist to visit and report on Dora Farms, where Saddam was said by the CIA to have been hiding on the opening night of the war.
Martin has received several Emmys, most recently in 2012 for his story "Starting Over." He has also received two Alfred I. duPont-Columbia University Awards (2002 and 2004) for his body of work, most of which has appeared on the "CBS Evening News" and "60 Minutes Wednesday."
Regarding the first Alfred I. DuPont-Columbia University Award, the award committee said that his "consistently excellent reporting on the beat of national security hit its peak this year....break[ing] news on a wide range of defense and security stories with details that only experience and doggedness can ferret out. This is exemplary reporting that repeatedly breaks through the barriers of official statements."
In awarding the second DuPont, the committee said, "David Martin's reports on the Pentagon, the military build-up to the Iraq war and on the war itself demonstrate his exceptional grasp of national security issues. Teamed with his long-time producer, Mary Walsh, Martin consistently breaks new information with clear reporting on the Pentagon's goals. He exemplifies the role of a journalist: to measure what we are being told against what we find out."
Martin also received the 2004 Joan S. Barone Award for excellence in Washington-based national affairs and public policy reporting awarded by the Washington Radio & Television Correspondents' Association.
He joined CBS News as its Pentagon correspondent in 1983. Martin's duties later expanded to include the State Department and intelligence beats.
Before that, he covered defense and intelligence matters for Newsweek magazine from its Washington bureau (1977-83). Martin was a reporter with the Associated Press in Washington (1973-77), covering the FBI and CIA. He also was a member of the AP special assignment team (1977).
Martin began his journalism career as a researcher for CBS News in New York in 1969. He then became a news writer with the AP broadcast wire (1971-72) and a fellow at the Washington Journalism Center (1973).
Martin is the author of two books, "Wilderness of Mirrors" (Harper & Row, 1980), an account of the secret wars between the CIA and KGB, and "Best Laid Plans: The Inside Story of America's War Against Terrorism" (Harper & Row, 1988).
He was born July 28, 1943, in Washington, D.C. He graduated from Yale University in 1965 with a bachelor's degree in English. During the Vietnam War, Martin served as an officer aboard a U.S. Navy destroyer.
Martin and his wife, Dr. Elinor Martin, live in Chevy Chase, Maryland. They have four children.
CBS News: Insurgents who attacked U.S. Embassy in Kabul called Pakistani intelligence operatives before and during assault
One staffer survived by pure chance, but another wasn't so lucky; David Martin tells their stories
Rescue of trapped man described as "The most incredible feat of bravery I ever saw"
The Taliban is reaping enormous profits off bad U.S. contracting, commission says; Gov't has 260K contractors at once
After 30 Americans in all were killed in one Afghan Chinook crash this weekend, a country mourns
With American troops patrolling on foot, the result has been a tripling in the number of multiple amputations
A local activist tells CBS News that the shelling had continued at seven to eight bombs per minute
Connor, 4, calls Section 60 of Arlington National Cemetery heaven; that's where his father is buried
24,000 files, including plans for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and secret information about American satellites were vacuumed up in a computer hacking - apparently by hostile governments
Both General David Petraeus, and Joint Chiefs Chairman Admiral Mike Mullen initially balked at President Obama's drawdown strategy
Military brass wanted more troops to stay longer in Afghanistan, but generals are "okay" with President Obama's plan
Diplomat scolds Afghan president Karzai for accusing the US of acting like an occupations force
Latest Pentagon survey finds 73 percent of combat troops in Afghanistan have lost a member of their unit
After the arrest of CIA informants for the bin Laden raid, U.S. politicians consider but fear breaking ties with Pakistan
Pilot program at Walter Reed Army Medical Center helps military wives deal with PTSD