Jonathan Steele (born 15 February 1941) is a British journalist and an author of several books on international affairs.
Steele won a scholarship to Eton College and was educated there from the age of thirteen, and then went on to King's College, Cambridge (BA) and Yale University (MA). He has reported on Afghanistan, Russia, Iraq, and scores of other countries. He was Washington Bureau Chief for the Guardian from 1975 to 1979, Moscow Bureau Chief from 1988 to 1994, Foreign News Editor between 1979 and 1982 and Chief Foreign Correspondent for The Guardian between 1982 and 1988 during which he reported on civil war in El Salvador and Nicaragua as well as the US invasion of Grenada in 1983. On return to London in 1994 after six years in Moscow, he covered the crisis in Kosovo in 1998 and 1999 and the fall of Slobodan Milosevic in 2000. As Senior Foreign Correspondent he covered numerous stories in the Middle East after 2001. He covered the US/UK invasion of Iraq in 2003 and was regularly on assignment in Baghdad for the next three years. This resulted in January 2008 in his book Defeat: Why America and Britain Lost Iraq which was published by I.B. Tauris in the UK and Counterpoint in the US. He covered the crisis in Syria after 2011, making numerous trips to Damascus. He reported on the Israeli invasion of south Lebanon in July/August 2006.
In 2006, Steele won a Martha Gellhorn Prize for Journalism Special Award in honor of his career contributions. He was named International Reporter of the Year in the British Press Awards in 1981 and again in 1991. He won the London Press Club's Scoop of the Year Award in 1991 for being the only English-language reporter to reach the villa in the Crimea where Mikhail Gorbachev was held captive and interview the Soviet president during the brief coup in August that year. In 1998 he won Amnesty International's foreign reporting award for his coverage of ethnic cleansing in Kosovo. In 1998 he also won the James Cameron award.
Steele is a frequent broadcaster on the BBC and an occasional contributor to the London Review of Books. Since March 2014 he has worked as Chief Reporter of the website Middle East Eye.