Today (NBC program) | television program | National Security Agency | Apollo program | Fulbright Program | National Security Council | Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe | United States National Security Council | Television program | United Nations Security Council | National Security Advisor | United States Department of Homeland Security | security | National Security Advisor (United States) | Social Security Administration | United Nations Security Council resolution | Nightline (US news program) | Mutual Broadcasting System | Today (Australian TV program) | Glenn Beck Program | V-12 Navy College Training Program | United Nations Security Council Resolution 1267 | Transportation Security Administration | Sunrise (TV program) | Program and System Information Protocol | Hacker (computer security) | George C. Marshall European Center for Security Studies | Computer program | United Nations Security Council Resolution 1373 | The Sarah Silverman Program |
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 Eisenhower to undertake a completely independent, objective, and non-partisan analysis of the military assistance aspects of the U.S. Mutual Security Program (MSP).