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Dolf Droge is a former White House National Security Council specialist who
for nearly a decade was trusted by President Lyndon Johnson, President
Richard Nixon and President Ronald Reagan to respond to nation-wide requests
from concerned citizens and organizations seeking information on crucial
world issues; inviting him and arranging for his travel to their communities
or themselves traveling to Washington D.C. seeking information and
participating with him in countless face-to-face White House discussions and
briefings.
Dolf Droge served in the U.S. Government for 32 years including: U.S.A.F.
Korean War, (195l-54); U.S. Information Agency (l955-l966) including
assignments in Thailand, Laos, Poland, Vietnam, and the Voice of America;
USIA's Global Radio Network in Washington, DC (1962-1966); U.S. Agency for
International Development's Training Division (USAID) l966-1985 including
three assignment loans from USAID to President Johnson's White House
National Security Council 1967-1969; President Nixon's National Security
Council 1969-1973; and President Reagan's White House Office of Public
Liaison 1983-1985.
Retiring after 32 years of U.S. Government service in 1985, Dolf has become
a free-lance speaker, a member of the AIM/AEF Speakers Bureau, a Chairman of
the Council for Defense of Freedom, a radio talk show host and for three
years co-anchor of a national radio newshour. As one of AIM's best-known
speakers, he is in demand at social and political organizations, schools and
universities throughout the United States.
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