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Radio programs articulate US values to the global community
The Christina Science Monitor ^ | February 22, 2006 | John Hughes

Posted on 02/21/2006 6:55:14 PM PST by Denver Ditdat

SALT LAKE CITY – When I was a foreign correspondent in Africa and Asia, the most valued part of my kit after my portable typewriter was a little shortwave radio. It was my link to the outside world in the remotest parts of those continents. Across the static over thousands of miles, I would tune in each night, when reception was better, to the news from Voice of America - its rousing familiar introductory chords momentarily stirring pangs of homesickness - to get a trusted briefing on what was happening in America and elsewhere in the world.

Years later, when I served as director of VOA, my admiration for it was only heightened by my association with the talented journalists, foreign service officers, and expatriates from various lands who so carefully gathered the news and broadcast it around the globe in a multitude of tongues. Though it was not directed internally to an American audience, Scotty Reston, the famous New York Times columnist, told me that it was his favorite newscast and that he listened to it every night on a shortwave radio.

Today the typewriter is an anachronism, supplanted by the laptop computer, and many have abandoned shortwave radio in favor of television and more modern methods of communication such as Internet websites.

There is a question as to whether there is any longer a critical mass for shortwave listening, and whether VOA and the other government radio stations have outlived their usefulness. Their heyday was in the cold war, and that is long since gone.

The methods of delivery may change, but the subversive message sent to not-yet-free nations - that all men and women have the right to liberty - is as important as ever.

We are engaged in a war against terrorism that, since 9/11, President Bush has warned will be long. It requires force of arms but is also a war of ideas. With the lands of Islam as the heartland of this war, it is understandable that the focus of institutions like VOA, whether the message be delivered by satellite television, or shortwave, or FM radio, should be directed at them. Sadly this means that language services beamed elsewhere are being cut or abandoned, so that broadcasting to Iran and the Arab countries of the Middle East in their own languages can be increased.

One of the casualties is English- language broadcasting to many parts of the world (except Africa). This is unfortunate because even in countries whose native language is not English, English is often the language used by the elite and the leadership, who are especially desirable targets for VOA's programming.

Other language broadcasts by radio to be cut are Croatian, Turkish, Thai, Greek, and Georgian. Radio broadcasts to go, but which will be continued on TV, are Albanian, Bosnian, Macedonian, Serbian, Russian, and Hindi.

The budget proposed for US international broadcasting in the coming financial year is $671.9 million, actually about 4.3 percent more than the budget in fiscal year 2006. This is a pittance compared to the billions being spent on military operations against terrorists. The ideal would be a budget that could encompass the needs for broadcasting to Islamic lands but still maintain English programs for lower priority but nonetheless important regions. Ironically, China Radio International has just cranked up a new FM transmitter in Kenya beaming Chinese, Swahili, and English to African audiences. Also broadcasting in English is the Voice of Iran. Al-Jazeera has a round-the-clock TV channel in English.

The New York Times reports that "with the retreat of Voice of America from the international market for news delivery in English," a Berlin radio station long used by VOA will be taken over in April by National Public Radio, broadcasting programs like "Car Talk" and "Fresh Air." The Times says NPR seeks to become a respected global voice.

If the war of arms against terrorists is likely to be long, so is the war of words. As we have seen in Iraq, the terrorists have mastered the most modern technology for disseminating their message. We must look beyond the suicide bombers of today, who may be beyond reason. We must reason with the next generation now undergoing brainwashing in the madrassahs, or schools of the Islamic lands.

Nor can the US ignore the rest of the world. Even America's friends must not be taken for granted. They, as well as foes, must hear American policies explained, and America's values and principles reasserted.

In these challenging times, America's voice to the world should be strengthened, not diminished.

• John Hughes, a former editor of the Monitor, served as a director of the Voice of America in the Reagan administration.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; Government
KEYWORDS: broadcast; hf; radio; shortwave; sw; voavoiceofamerica
a Berlin radio station long used by VOA will be taken over in April by National Public Radio, broadcasting programs like "Car Talk" and "Fresh Air." The Times says NPR seeks to become a respected global voice.

Great. Just what we need - more liberal tripe spreading home-grown hatred of America over the globe.

1 posted on 02/21/2006 6:55:16 PM PST by Denver Ditdat
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To: 1066AD; 1ofmanyfree; AlexW; ASOC; bigbob; Brian Allen; Calamari; CenTex; CharlotteVRWC; ...
Ham Radio Ping List

Please Freepmail me if you want to be added to or deleted from the list.

2 posted on 02/21/2006 6:55:43 PM PST by Denver Ditdat (Melting solder since 1975)
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To: Denver Ditdat
I have a shortwave, but all I get on it in English are fake-O preachers begging for money. I think the Internet is a better bet. Public radio is no better than the fake preachers. If their target group really is the rich and elites, and I'm not sure it is, then streaming audio is the way to go. Streaming audio links to talk shows
3 posted on 02/21/2006 7:00:07 PM PST by jwalburg (If I have not seen as far as others, it is because of the giants standing on my shoulders.)
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To: Denver Ditdat

VOA dived to the Left after the fall of the Berlin Wall. So a change to the programming of National Socialist Radio won't be all that much different.


4 posted on 02/21/2006 8:48:08 PM PST by HolgerDansk ("Oh Bother", said Pooh, as he worked the bolt.)
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To: Denver Ditdat

NPR?!!!!!

An ANTIamerican station to represent america?!!!!!

The NPR is not respected in the USA why would it be respected abroad?

They shoudl just play rush limbaugh and conservative talk radio. THAT will turn the tide.

Then again this is CSM, known for their own bovine compounds.


5 posted on 02/21/2006 10:32:11 PM PST by longtermmemmory (VOTE!)
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To: Denver Ditdat

"Fresh Air." The Times says NPR seeks to become a respected global voice."

Thats enough to make me want to puke.
I tuned out NPR about 10 years ago.
I remember that program "Fresh Air". It should have been called "Fart Air".

de W4EX


6 posted on 02/22/2006 12:57:15 AM PST by AlexW (Reporting from Bratislava, Slovakia)
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