About Keith Raffel

Keith Raffel

Keith Raffel

As senior counsel to the Senate Intelligence Committee, Keith Raffel worked to monitor the activities of the CIA, NSA and other three-letter agencies. Keith left the Intelligence Committee to return home to California and run for Congress. Although losing that race is still a painful memory, he counts himself lucky for escaping the morass of congressional politics when he did.

With an engineer father and hometown of Palo Alto, Keith then followed the path Fate had laid out and embarked on a tech career. He founded and then sold Silicon Valley’s first cloud-computing company. For the past eight years, he’s been a lecturer and resident scholar at Harvard. While there, he developed and co-taught a course on technology, ethics and society.

Keith writes a weekly column for Creators Syndicate that appears in newspapers and on websites across the country. In addition, he has established a career as a bestselling novelist. TheNew York Times deemed his first work of fiction, Dot Dead, “worthy of a Steve Jobs keynote presentation.” All told, he has five published novels: two Silicon Valley mysteries, an archeological thriller, a spy story and a historical thriller.

A long-time denizen of Palo Alto in the heart of California’s Silicon Valley, Keith now spends the academic year as a resident scholar at Harvard where he lives in an apartment in the same 400-student dorm as he did when an undergraduate himself.

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America Is Not Iran, Thank Goodness Jan 28, 2026

Over the past month, two governments faced widespread protests. One responded with mass killings. The other, under popular pressure, appears to be backing down. On Dec. 28, a collapse in the value of Iranian currency sparked demonstrations among shop... Read More

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Humphrey Bogart Reminds Us There Comes a Time To Choose Sides Jan 21, 2026

Sunday night I went to the local cinema to catch the 83-year-old film "Casablanca" starring screen legends Humphrey Bogart and Ingrid Bergman. I've seen it many times, but on this occasion, it seemed to be sending me a message across the decades. Th... Read More

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I've Got Addiction Down to a Tea Jan 14, 2026

The advice to "Write drunk, edit sober" is often attributed (probably incorrectly) to the hard-drinking Ernest Hemingway, the Nobel Prize-winning novelist. Here's my own riff on that advice. I could not have written five novels or 150 columns without... Read More

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Trump Invades the 1950s Jan 07, 2026

The Trump-ordered attack on Venezuela and capture of its president is meant not only to be a distraction from the mounting Epstein scandal. It's also a power play consistent with the American president's backward-looking economic and geopolitical vie... Read More