ISNI: |
0000 0001 1066 3594
https://isni.org/isni/0000000110663594
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Name: |
Bader, William B.
Bader, William Banks
William B. Bader
William B. Bader (former U.S. Assistant Secretary of State)
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Dates: |
born 1931-09-08 deceased 2016-03-15 |
Creation class: |
Language material |
Creation role: |
author
creator
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Related names: |
Princeton University. Center of International Studies
SRI International (isAffiliatedWith)
Stibor-Milovcic, Alexandra
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Titles: |
Austria between East and West, 1945-1955
Österreich im Spannungsfeld zwischen Ost und West 1945 bis 1955. -
Taiwan Relations Act, 1989:, The
United States and the spread of nuclear weapons, The
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Notes: |
Associated Group: SRI International Princeton University United States. Congress. Senate United States. Department of State Eurasia Foundation naf
Associated Language:
Fuller form of personal name: William Banks
International relations Governmental investigations History Education and state Cultural policy
LC data base, 5/18/89 (hdg.: Bader, William B.)
Public officers Historians Executives
The Taiwan Relations Act, 1989 CIP t.p. (William B. Bader) author p. (sr. v.p., policy group, SRI Intl.; Ph.D., Princeton)
Washington post WWW site, viewed Mar. 24, 2016 (William B. Bader, who held high-ranking foreign-policy positions with several federal agencies and who, as a Senate staff member, helped investigate CIA abuses and events surrounding the 1964 Gulf of Tonkin Resolution, died March 15 [2016] in Sykesville, Md.; he was 84; William Banks Bader was born Sept. 8, 1931, in Atlantic City; received a doctorate in history from Princeton University in 1964, then worked for the CIA and the State Department for a few years; in the mid-1970s, Dr. Bader was on the staff of a Senate investigative committee led by Frank Church (D-Idaho); in that role, Dr. Bader helped expose a variety of unsavory practices by the CIA, including attempts to topple governments and assassinate foreign leaders; later worked at the Defense Department before returning to the Senate as chief of staff of the Foreign Relations Committee from 1979 to 1981; then spent 10 years with SRI International, a research firm and government contractor; president of the Eurasia Foundation in Washington from 1992 to 1995; assistant secretary of state for educational and cultural affairs from 1999 to 2001; lived for many years in Alexandria, Va.)
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Sources: |
NLN
NTA
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