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DTSTART:20251102T020000
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DESCRIPTION:South Korea's Transition from Military dictatorship to Vibrant 
 Democracy In the early 1970s\, there was a country in Northeast Asia that 
 had started a covert nuclear weapons program\, was secretly buying advance
 d weapons systems from Europe\, and whose intelligence service routinely u
 sed torture against citizens judged to be disloyal to their country. That 
 country was South Korea\, which today is widely recognized as Americaʼs st
 rongest Asian ally\, and one of Asiaʼs most vibrant democracies. Ambassado
 r Gregg was CIA station chief in Seoul from 1973 to 1975\, served as natio
 nal security adviser to Vice President George H. W. Bush from 1982 to 1988
 \, was Ambassador to the Republic of Korea from 1989 to 1993\, and is chai
 rman emeritus of The Korea Society. He is a member of the KPAC senior advi
 sory group.
DTEND:20110427T170000Z
DTSTAMP:20260511T133100Z
DTSTART:20110427T160000Z
LOCATION:
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Korean Peninsula Affairs Center presents: Donald P. Gregg
UID:RFCALITEM639140886603397795
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:South Korea's Transition from Military dictato
 rship to Vibrant Democracy In the early 1970s\, there was a country in Nor
 theast Asia that had started a covert nuclear weapons program\, was secret
 ly buying advanced weapons systems from Europe\, and whose intelligence se
 rvice routinely used torture against citizens judged to be disloyal to the
 ir country. That country was South Korea\, which today is widely recognize
 d as Americaʼs strongest Asian ally\, and one of Asiaʼs most vibrant democ
 racies. Ambassador Gregg was CIA station chief in Seoul from 1973 to 1975\
 , served as national security adviser to Vice President George H. W. Bush 
 from 1982 to 1988\, was Ambassador to the Republic of Korea from 1989 to 1
 993\, and is chairman emeritus of The Korea Society. He is a member of the
  KPAC senior advisory group.
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