-Caveat Lector-

from:
http://www.seas.gwu.edu/nsarchive/nsa/arc_overview.html
<A HREF="http://www.seas.gwu.edu/nsarchive/nsa/arc_overview.html">The National
Security Archive / Overview </A>
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Documents, also.
Om
K
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 Overview


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The National Security Archive combines a unique range of functions in
one non-governmental, non-profit institution. The Archive is
simultaneously a research institute on international affairs, a library
and archive of declassified U.S. documents obtained through the Freedom
of Information Act, a public interest law firm defending and expanding
public access to government information through the FOIA, and an indexer
and publisher of the documents in books, microfiche, and electronic
formats. The Archive's approximately $1.5 million per year budget comes
from publication revenues and from private philanthropists such as the
Carnegie Corporation, the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation,
and the Ford Foundation.

The National Security Archive was founded in 1985 by a group of
journalists and scholars who had obtained documentation from the U.S.
government under the Freedom of Information Act and sought a centralized
repository for these materials. Over the past eleven years, the Archive
has become the world's largest non-governmental library of declassified
documents. Located on the seventh floor of the George Washington
University's Gelman Library in Washington, D.C., the Archive is designed
to apply the latest in computerized indexing technology to the massive
amount of material already released by the U.S. government on
international affairs, make them accessible to researchers and the
public, and go beyond that base to build comprehensive collections of
documents on specific topics of greatest interest to scholars and the
public.

Supporting some 30 terminals, the Archive's mainframe computer system
hosts major databases of released documents (over 90,000 records),
authority files of individuals and organizations in international
affairs (over 15,000 records), and FOIA requests filed by Archive staff
and outside requesters on international affairs (over 17,000 records).
Despite the Archive's non-traditional role (since the originals remain
inside the government -- hopefully), Archive staff have developed
extensive expertise with all levels of archival recordkeeping, ranging
from basic collection description to box- and file-level inventories to
individual document cataloging.

The Archive reading room is open to the public without charge, and has
welcomed visitors from 32 foreign countries and across the United
States--some of whom stay for weeks. The Archive fields more than 2,500
public service requests for documents and information every year.
Archive staff are frequently called on to testify before Congress,
lecture at universities, and appear on national broadcasts and in media
interviews on the subject of the Freedom of Information Act and various
topics in international affairs for which the Archive's collections
provide documentation.

The Archive's financial affairs are administered by The Fund for Peace,
Inc, a New York-based tax-exempt corporation established in 1957 to
encourage research and public education on international affairs. The
Fund is an active federation of programmatically autonomous project,
each of which raises its own funds, utilizes its own advisory
committees, and runs its own activities. Administrative and fiscal
responsibility for the Archive is vested in The Fund for Peace; program
guidance for the Archive is provided by the Archive's Advisory Board,
chaired by Russell Hemenway (President of The National Committee for an
Effective Congress).The Fund's accounts have been audited annually by
outside CPA firms, Deloitte & Touche from 1972-1991 and Keller Bruner &
Company in 1992-97. As an operating division of the Fund, the Archive
receives tax-deductible funding from foundations, and approximately 20%
of the Archive's annual budget from publication royalties.

The first major publication of the Archive was a 678-page mass market
paperback published by Warner Books in 1987, The Chronology, on the
Iran-contra affair. Time magazine called the book "must reading," and
Ted Koppel of ABC News Nightline praised it for including "every known
fact about the Iran-contra scandal."

The second Archive publication project has produced a series of large
microform collections of documents on U.S. foreign policy as well as a
CD-ROM index to the entire series co-published by the scholarly
micropublisher Chadwyck-Healey, Inc. These collections include an
average of 16,000 pages of documents released through the FOIA and other
governmental processes, accompanied by finding aids which average over
1,700 pages for each collection--indices, catalogs, chronologies,
glossaries, bibliographies and introductory essays. More than 500 copies
of these microfiche collections have been purchased by universities and
research libraries and in ten foreign countries. Microform Review
 stated, "The NSA series is unusual in public document publishing... it
makes documents available from the twilight zone between currently
released government information, and normal declassification after the
elapse of the statutory period." Government Publications Review wrote
that "NSA collections are almost universally praised for adding a new
and invaluable research tool to national security studies." Other
reviews in the library press have noted the collections' comprehensive
coverage, user-friendly guides, state-of-the-art indexing and quality
archival microfiche. Published collections include:

•El Salvador: The Making of U.S. Policy, 1977-1984
•The Iran-Contra Affair: The Making of a Scandal, 1983-1988

•Iran: The Making of U.S. Policy, 1977-1980

•The Cuban Missile Crisis, 1962

•The U.S. Intelligence Community, 1947-1989

•The Philippines: U.S. Policy during the Marcos Years, 1965-1986

•Afghanistan: The Making of U.S. Policy, 1973-1990

•Nicaragua: The Making of U.S. Policy, 1978-1990

•South Africa: The Making of U.S. Policy, 1962-1989

•Military Uses of Space: The Making of U.S. Policy, 1945-1991

•Nuclear Non-Proliferation, 1945-1991

•The Berlin Crisis, 1958-1962

•Presidential Directives on National Security: From Truman to Clinton

•Iraqgate: Saddam Hussein, U.S. Policy and the Prelude to the Persian
Gulf War (1980-1994)

•The Soviet Estimate: U.S. Analysis of the Soviet Union, 1947-1991

•El Salvador: War, Peace, and Human Rights, 1980-1994

•U.S. Espionage and Intelligence, 1947-1996

•U.S. Nuclear History: Nuclear Arms and Politics in the Missile Age,
1955-1968

•The National Security Archive Index on CD-ROM: The Making of U.S.
Policy






The third Archive publication project consists of a series of documents
readers published by The New Press and distributed by W.W. Norton &
Company especially for the classroom and general public. The first
volume, The Cuban Missile Crisis, 1962 (415 pp.), appeared in October
1992 (the 30th anniversary of the Crisis), with a foreword by former
Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara; the second reader, The Iran-Contra
Scandal: The Declassified History (412 pp.), appeared in May 1993 with a
foreword by Theodore Draper. The Washington Post Book World recommended
the Missile Crisis book to "the reader who wishes to gain a sense of
involvement in the travails of the crisis managers;" and the Tampa
Tribune described the Iran-contra reader as a "Rosetta Stone" for
deciphering the scandal. The third volume, South Africa and the United
States: The Declassified History, was published in March 1994. The
fourth reader, White House E-Mail: The Top Secret Computer Messages the
Reagan-Bush White House tried to Destroy (254 pp.), was published in
1995 and included a companion computer diskette containing 260
additional e-mail messages. The New York Times described White House
E-Mail as "a stream of insights into past American policy, spiced with
depictions of White House officials in poses they would never adopt for
a formal portrait."




In the process of developing its extensive collections, the Archive has
become the leading non-profit user of the U.S. Freedom of Information
Act. The archive has inherited more than 2,000 requests from outside
requesters who donated their documents and their pending requests to the
Archive, and initiated more than 15,000 other FOIA requests over the
past eleven years. The Archive's work has set new precedents under the
FOIA, including more efficient procedures for document processing at the
State Department, less burden on requesters to qualify for waivers of
processing fees, and the archival preservation of electronic information
held by the government. This expertise in the U.S. FOIA, as well as in
archival and library practices, has brought delegations from South
Africa, Russia, Hungary, Germany, Pakistan, India, the Philippines, and
various Latin American countries to the Archive to learn from this
innovative model of a non-governmental institutional memory for formerly
secret government documents and the Freedom of Information Act.



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Return to the National Security Archive Home Page



-----
Aloha, He'Ping,
Om, Shalom, Salaam.
Em Hotep, Peace Be,
Omnia Bona Bonis,
All My Relations.
Adieu, Adios, Aloha.
Amen.
Roads End
Kris

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