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Left to Right: Secretary of State Dean Rusk with Bureau of Intelligence and Research Director Thomas L. Hughes, and Deputy Director Allan Evans.

New - May 6, 2004
Intelligence and Vietnam
The Top Secret 1969 State Department Study


May 3, 2004
Dubious Secrets Update
14 Million New Secrets Last Year - Here's One of Them

April 30, 2004
Presidential Records Act Lawsuit Reconsidered
Archive, Historians Ask Judge to Reconsider Dismissal


April 19, 2004
The Blind Man and the Elephant
Reporting on the Mexican Military


Update - April 12, 2004
Read the President's Daily Brief
The Declassified August 6, 2001 PDB and More

New - April 7, 2004
The U.S. and the Genocide in Rwanda 1994
The Assassination of the Presidents and the Beginning of the "Apocalypse"
Previous Releases

August 20, 2001
Evidence of Inaction


More recent items

National Security Archive, Suite 701, Gelman Library, The George Washington University, 2130 H Street, NW, Washington, D.C., 20037 - Phone: 202/994-7000 - Fax: 202/994-7005 - nsarchiv@gwu.edu

Update - February 11, 2004
Iraq and Weapons of Mass Destruction

The Saddam Hussein Sourcebook
Declassified Secrets from the U.S.-Iraq Relationship

Rumsfeld and Saddam
December 20, 1983
More secret history on a "presentable young man" with an "engaging smile"


Special Exhibits
The September 11th Sourcebooks
Primary sources on the War on Terrorism

The Cuban Missile Crisis, 1962
The 40th Anniversary

Nixon Meets Elvis
Documents and photos from the extraordinary meeting

Links
The Digital National Security Archive
Available from ProQuest

Archive Projects
Chile | China and the United States | China and the Bomb | Cuba | Guatemala | Honduras | India-Pakistan | Intelligence Policy | Iran | Israel | Japan | Mexico | Nuclear History | Openness in Russia and Eastern Europe
The National Security Archive is an independent non-governmental research institute and library located at The George Washington University in Washington, D.C. The Archive collects and publishes declassified documents acquired through the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA). A tax-exempt public charity, the Archive receives no U.S. government funding; its budget is supported by publication royalties and donations from foundations and individuals. On March 17, 2000, Long Island University named the National Security Archive as winner of a Special George Polk Award for 1999 for "piercing self-serving veils of government secrecy" and "serving as an essential journalistic resource."

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