History 4698
Links

Foreign Relations of the United States--A few years ago, the State Department began releasing these volumes, which contain the official internal correspondence of the US government regarding foreign affairs, in web versions.
Documents Relating to United States Foreign Policy--Another very useful site. Arranged chronologically until 1945, thematically thereafter.
Diplomatic History Resources--Another clearinghouse site; it contains links to governments around the world, other diplomatic history courses on the web, and a wide variety of other material.
National Security Archive--Useful for intelligence-related documents from the post-1945 material, it has just released a large batch of documents on the US involvement in the 1973 Chilean coup. The documents are available on-line through a CU-intranet computer.
A Century of Lawmaking--An amazing site that contains all congressional debates, as well as a host of other government source material, for the period from 1773 through 1873. It predates the period for this course, but if you're interested in 19th century foreign relations, it's quite remarkable.
Great Speeches of the 20th Century--Like the above site, it's not absolutely germane to this course, but it does have some remarkable clips. So too does this History Out Loud site, while this site is good for pictures of 20th century political leaders and events.
Avalon Project, Yale University--This site is devoted primarily to international law. It has a rich batch of treaties and international agreements.
Cuban Missile Crisis--the NSA's site devoted to the missile crisis.
Cold War International History Project--A somewhat hit-and-miss resource. Less valuable for US documents; has been quite active trying to get former Eastern bloc documents on-line.
Loyola Strategic Intelligence--A catch-all site for intelligence matters, useful along with this State Department site on the founding of the American intelligence community.
Brigham Vietnam site--A prize-winning site put together by students of Vassar professor Bob Brigham, who himself has done path-breaking work on the NLF. This PBS site and this internet-only site are also useful on the war, as is this somewhat quirky site on Laos.
Nixon-Zhou talks--For those interested in the opening to China, start here.
PBS site and this internet-only site are also useful on the war, as is this somewhat quirky site on Laos.
Nixon-Zhou talks--For those interested in the opening to China, start here.
PBS Gulf War site--The on-line version of a "Frontline" series on the Gulf War.

Links to a host of other sites are available throughout the course web pages.