Claus Kleber is a Germanjournalist and former lawyer. He anchors heute journal, an evening news program on ZDF, one of Germany's two major public TV stations. He is also known for his expertise in United States politics and German-American relations, as evidenced by his 2005 bestseller Amerikas Kreuzzüge.
After completing his PhD, Kleber became a journalist and worked during the 1980s as a Washington correspondent for Deutschlandfunk, a German public broadcaster. In the spring of 1989, Kleber returned to Germany as Chief Editor of RIAS, a major broadcaster in Berlin under the control of the United States Information Agency. From 1990 he worked for 12 years as Senior Correspondent and Bureau Chief for ARD, one of the two nationwide German public television networks. There he got interviews with all US Presidents in that period. Donald Rumsfeld and Colin Powell. In June 2002, Kleber moved as ARD Bureau Chief to London. A few months into the new job, he received an offer to become managing editor and principal anchor of heute journal, the 30 minute late evening news show of ZDF, the other public television channel beside the ARD. one of Germany's leading television news programs. In 2014, he interviewed US President Barack Obama.
Documentaries
Kleber is also a documentary filmmaker. With his long-standing professional partner, Angela Andersen, he has created documentary films, including India – Unstoppable for the DVD-market. They later also made Documentaries for broadcasting, such as The Bomb, about nuclear threats in the 21st century, Machtfaktor Erde on climate change. HUNGER! and DURST! is a 2-part documentary about how he envisages the global situation in 2050.
Since 2015, Claus Kleber also works as an Honorary Professor at his alma mater, the University of Tübingen. He is a member of Atlantik-Brücke, an invitation-only organisation promoting cultural, economic and military co-operation between Germany and the USA.
Recognition
Kleber is the recipient of several awards, including the Media prize of the Johanna Quandt Foundation for excellence in economic reporting, the RIAS Berlin committee TV prize, and the Deutscher Fernsehpreis in 2005, 2006 and 2013. Claus Kleber and his ZDF partner anchor Marietta Slomka were awarded the prestigious Grimme Prize in 2009 for their merits on the evolution of television. In 2010, he won the Hanns-Joachim-Friedrichs-Award for Outstanding Journalism. His work in documentaries on global challenges received the Deutscher Fernsehpreis for The Bomb in 2009 and the Bayerischer Fernsehpreis for HUNGER! DURST! in 2015. In a 2018 survey conducted by Forsa Institute, he was voted Germany's most trusted news presenter.
Personal life
Claus Kleber has been married to Renate Kleber, a physician, since 1982. They have two daughters and the family lives in Wiesbaden, Germany.