We discovered today that the Digital National Security Archive (DNSA) has
at least two collections that specifically say they contain leaked documents
in the description of the collection. I just wanted to share the
information with anyone else who might subscribe.
We have notified Susan Brock at ProQuest.
http://nsarchive.chadwyck.com/home.do
Here are the collection descriptions.
Electronic Surveillance and the National Security Agency: From Shamrock to
Snowden (Electronic Surveillance)
Electronic Surveillance and the National Security Agency: From Shamrock to
Snowden is a collection of leaked and declassified records documenting U.S.
and allied electronic surveillance policies, relationships, and activities.
It serves as an addition to several National Security Archive documents sets
- including those on U.S. Intelligence and the National Security Agency. The
records provide information on the limitations imposed on electronic
surveillance activities, organizations, legal authorities, collection
activities, and liaison relationships.
The United States and the Two Koreas, Part II, 1969-2010 (The United States
and the Two Koreas)
The National Security Archive's second collection on U.S.-Korean relations
covers, as did Part One, the full range of diplomatic, security, and
economic relations between the United States and its ally, South Korea; and
the challenges to the U.S. posed by an adversarial North Korea. The
documents - obtained and selected since the publication of Part One - add
significant breadth and depth to the Archive's coverage of events and issues
from Nixon into the first Obama administration. The collection contains
1,634 records originating with the State Department, the Pentagon, the
Central Intelligence Agency, and other agencies, including key documents
from the WikiLeaks database. Among the notable new materials are selections
from the Secretary of State's Morning Intelligence Summary on developments
in the two Koreas during the George H.W. Bush presidency. Nearly half of the
new documents date from the Clinton presidency, which faced the dual
challenges of working with its allies to curb North Korea's nuclear
ambitions, as well dealing with the Asian economic crisis that struck South
Korea and the region in the late 1990s. The WikiLeaks documents, carefully
reviewed for sensitivity by the collection's editor, are particularly useful
for researchers because they shed significant light on the renewed tensions
with North Korea in recent years. During the George W. Bush presidency, the
U.S. included Pyongyang as part of the "axis of evil," and the 1994
Framework Agreement unraveled after North Korea admitted it had violated its
pledge to halt work on nuclear weapons. During the first year of the Obama
presidency, North Korean provocations continued to hinder the ongoing
six-party talks to resolve the nuclear issue. Each of these developments has
helped to ensure that the Korean Peninsula will remain a top-priority
concern for the United States for the foreseeable future.
Tiffany Konczey
Chief, Access and Technical Services Division
USACGSC/Combined Arms Research Library
250 Gibbon Ave.
Fort Leavenworth, KS 66027
[log in to unmask]
CML 913-758-3013
DSN 585-3013
FAX 913-758-3014
http://carl.army.mil
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