Draper Committee

The Presidents Committee to Study the United States Military Assistance Program ("Draper Committee") was a bipartisan committee, created in November 1958 by U.S. President Dwight D. Eisenhower to undertake a completely independent, objective, and non-partisan analysis of the military assistance aspects of the 1949 Mutual Defense Assistance Act.

Members

The Committee was composed of:[1]

  • William Henry Draper Jr. (chairman), board chairman of the Mexican Light & Power Co. and retired World War II major general,
  • Dillon Anderson, Houston Lawyer, onetime presidential National Security Advisor;
  • Joseph M. Dodge, Detroit Banker, onetime Budget Director;
  • Alfred Maximilian Gruenther, American Red Cross President, onetime Supreme Allied Commander in Europe;
  • Marx Leva, Washington Lawyer, onetime Assistant Secretary of Defense;
  • John J. McCloy, New York Banker, onetime High Commissioner in Germany;
  • George C. McGhee, Dallas Businessman, onetime Assistant Secretary of State;
  • General Joseph T. McNarney (ret.), onetime Commander of U.S. forces in Europe;
  • Admiral Arthur W. Radford (ret.), onetime Joint Chiefs of Staff chairman;
  • Oklahoma Oilman James E. Webb, onetime Under Secretary of State, onetime Budget Director.

References

  1. "To the Aid of Aid". Time Magazine. March 30, 1959. Archived from the original on November 12, 2006. Retrieved November 11, 2006.
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