Top nuclear scientist killed by remote-controlled gun, Iran says
Iranian President Hassan Rouhani blamed Israel for the killing of Mohsen Fakhrizadeh and vowed retribution "in due time."
Holly Williams is a CBS News senior foreign correspondent based in the network's CBS London bureau. She previously spent eight years in Istanbul, Turkey. Williams joined CBS News in July 2012, and has more than 25 years of experience covering major news events and international conflicts across Asia, Europe and the Middle East.
Williams has covered extensively for CBS News the present-day conflicts in Israel and Ukraine. Following the Oct. 7 attack by Hamas militants, she reported from the site where thousands of Israeli music festival attendees ran for safety during the surprise assault, around three miles from Gaza. Williams interviewed Moussa Abu Marzouk, a founding member of Hamas and a senior figure in its political wing, in Doha, Qatar, on hostage negotiations and a cease-fire deal between Hamas and Israel.
Williams has reported on-the-ground in Ukraine since the days of the 2014 Maidan revolution and first interviewed President Volodymyr Zelenskyy in June 2021 from the trenches of Russia's undeclared war on Ukraine and over breakfast in his parent's kitchen. Since Russia's ground invasion of Ukraine in early 2022, Williams has reported significantly on-the-ground and contributed investigative dispatches from the war to the CBS newsmagazine "60 Minutes," including a report on what U.S. taxpayers are getting for their money in Ukraine and an inside look at the formerly occupied city of Kherson, under constant fire by Russia, as Ukraine marked one year of war. Williams has additionally reported from within the Arctic Circle on rapid climate change facing the region that's in turn transforming the Arctic into a potential military flashpoint as Russia ramps up its military presence and readiness to reach the U.S. in an event of war.
In 2017, Williams received an Emmy for her report from Erbil, Iraq on Iraqi forces fighting off ISIS on the road to Mosul for the CBS Evening News. In 2015, Williams received the Edward R. Murrow award for her continuing coverage of ISIS, and the Jack R. Howard Award from the Scripps Howard Foundation for her early reporting on ISIS in Syria and northern Iraq.
Williams, who is fluent in Mandarin, received the George Polk Award in 2012 for her reporting on Chinese dissident Chen Guangcheng, after he escaped house arrest and fled to the U.S. Embassy in Beijing. She was the first reporter to reach his village - evading government security guards - where other members of his family were being harassed by the Chinese authorities.
Williams was one of the first journalists in Iraq to report on the emergence of ISIS in the country's north in the summer of 2014. She has continued to cover ISIS across the region, including the battle for Tikrit, the discovery of mass graves in western Iraq, and the militants' advance in Libya.
Williams has also covered Syria's civil war from inside the country, where she and her team gained access to a prison where alleged ISIS terrorists were being held, and interviewed female Kurdish fighters on the frontline.
Williams' international reporting includes the downfall of the Russian-backed government in Kyiv; the search for missing Malaysian Airlines Flight 370; the Israel-Gaza conflicts in 2014 and 2018; the uprisings in Egypt after the military removed former President Mohammed Morsi from office; and the Nepal earthquake. She also provided rare reporting from Saudi Arabia, and interviewed women who have been punished for demanding the right to drive.
Williams has distinguished herself as an international investigative reporter. In 2013, she went undercover inside a Bangladesh factory that exports clothing and other garments to U.S. and European retailers where she discovered safety and labor violations. She posed as an ivory buyer to report on the global trafficking of illegal ivory from Africa to China, and investigated the use of the U.S. Government-funded "dark net" by pedophiles.
Before joining CBS News, Williams was a Beijing-based Asia Correspondent for Sky News, covering the Japanese tsunami and nuclear disaster and the release of Burmese Peace Prize Laureate Aung San Suu Kyi from house arrest.
Prior to that, she was a producer for both BBC News and Sky News. She produced stories that won the Royal Television Society Award, the Foreign Press Association Award and the Golden Nymph.
Williams was a Nieman Fellow at Harvard University in 2007-2008. She has a Master of Arts in International Relations from Deakin University and a Bachelor's degree in Asian Studies from the Australian National University.
Iranian President Hassan Rouhani blamed Israel for the killing of Mohsen Fakhrizadeh and vowed retribution "in due time."
The new president will take over with a shrinking U.S. military footprint eroding trust, and Tehran vowing to take revenge for a brazen assassination it blames on Israel.
While this Thanksgiving celebration was very different from past ones at home, U.S. service members say there's still plenty to feel grateful for.
"If you have a powerful enemy and the enemy is in a state of crisis and chaos, you can benefit by that," a Russian political analyst tells CBS News, as the country's media portray exactly that image.
The earthquake rattled cities and unleashed a tsunami that flooded streets in western Turkey.
Paris and Madrid are on high alert, and with the virus spreading fast in England, officials are to roll out a new 3-tiered alert system - and new restrictions with it.
Small island just off mainland China is home to almost 24 million people, but they'd been bracing for a crisis like COVID-19 for 17 years.
One single mother told CBS News she sold her liver for $4,000, enough money to pay two years' rent for her family
MIT testing revealed that some masks distributed in Massachusetts were filtering less than 30%.
Nearly 18,000 parents in the country have signed a petition claiming their children are being used as guinea pigs.
Since December, 900,000 civilians have been forced to flee Syrian and Russian bombs in the northwest. Most are women and children.
Scientists say climate change is behind the unprecedented intensity of the bushfires that have burned a reported 27 million acres in Australia.
There are around 1,500 U.S. coalition troops on the Al Asad base and they had just minutes to take cover.
Thousands of protesters were able to get past Iraqi security forces and reach the U.S. Embassy compound.
Ukraine's been fighting a war against Russian-backed separatists since 2014.