The 'National Security Archive' is a
501(c)(3) non-profit research and archival institution located within
The George Washington University in
Washington, DC. Founded in 1985 by
Scott Armstrong and
Thomas Blanton, it archives and publishes declassified
U.S. government files concerning selected topics of American foreign policy. The Archive collects and analyzes the documents of many various government institutions obtained via the
Freedom of Information Act. The Archive then selects documents to be published in the form of manuscripts and microfiche as well as made available through their website.
The Archive operates under an advisory board which is overseen by a
board of directors. The Archive's research was awarded in late 2005 by winning an
Emmy Award for its work on the documentary, "Declassified: Nixon in China." More recently, the Archive uncovered a secret
reclassification program operating since 1999.
[1] This program was underway to reclassify documents related to American foreign policy during the 1940s and 1950s, at the
National Archives and Records Administration. The materials in question had all been declassified during the
Clinton administration.
From 1985 until 1998, the
Fund for Peace, Inc. was the archive's fiscal sponsor.
Among the Archive's more prominent institutional supporters today, are the
Carnegie Corporation of New York, the
Ford Foundation, the
Freedom Forum, the
John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation,
Congressional Quarterly, and
Cox Enterprises. The Archive receives funding from these, and other, organizations via their donations to the
National Security Archive Fund, established in order to administer the Archive's finances.
See also
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Family jewels (Central Intelligence Agency), documents unclassified in June 2007
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United States intervention in Chile
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Operation Condor
External links
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National Security Archive
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Digital National Security Archive Collections
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Charity Navigator overview of the National Security Archive Fund
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National Security Archive Sues CIA, 2006