David C. Miller Jr. | |
Party: | Republican |
Office1: | United States Ambassador to Tanzania |
President1: | Ronald Reagan |
Term Start1: | November 4, 1981 |
Term End1: | February 28, 1984 |
Office: | United States Ambassador to Zimbabwe |
Term Start: | May 31, 1984 |
Term End: | April 17, 1986 |
President: | Ronald Reagan |
Birth Name: | David Charles Miller Jr. |
Birth Date: | 15 July 1942 |
Birth Place: | Cleveland, Ohio |
David Charles Miller Jr. (born July 15, 1942) is an American lawyer and diplomat. He served in the Nixon administration and as the U.S. Ambassador to Tanzania and later Zimbabwe under Ronald Reagan.[1] [2] Miller also served on the African development foundation board of directors.[3]
Miller graduated from Harvard College and the University of Michigan Law School.[4]
Miller served as a White House Fellow in 1968-69. In the Nixon administration, Miller worked as confidential assistant to Attorney General John Mitchell for a year and a half, then was moved to the White House, where he worked with Nixon legal counsel John Dean. Miller in 2003 recalled one of his early interactions with Dean involved a request that Miller "set up a safe house here in Washington for the use of the president," for what was intended to be "a completely covert White House operation." Miller said, "I knew at that point that I was going to have to leave. I just said to myself: 'This is insane.'"[5]