Monday, October 10, 2011

Puddington Vol. 1

Puddington, Arch. Broadcasting Freedom: The Cold War Triumph of Radio Free Europe and Radio Liberty. Kentucky: University Press of Kentucky, 2000.


VOA-convey a U.S. Perspective (P,ix)


freedom radio-Cold War institutions (P, ix)


"Their goal was not simply to inform their listeners but also to bring about the peaceful demise of the Communist system and the liberation of what were known as satellite nations. The radios pursued these goals not by promoting the American way of life, but by serving as surrogate home radio services, alternatives to the controlled, party-dominated, domestic press. (P, ix)


"A sizable portion of Radio Liberty's Russian-language programs, including some programs that regularly boasted audiences in the millions, originated from New York. The Russian service included four or five full-time editors and correspondents, but since New York was the preferred destination for those among the intellectual elite who were fed up with Soviet restrictions, Soviet censorship, Soviet poverty and, especially, Soviet hypocrisy, the service was able to recruit literally dozens of talented reporters, writers, poets, musicians and commentators from among the wave emigrants who left the USSR during the 1970s."


"Most were hired as part-timers or freelancers. Though their pay was hardly extravagant, it could be a life-saver for intellectuals who had left good careers in the Soviet Union for the uncertainties of life in the United States. For some, a more important consideration was the opportunity to work as a journalist or critic in the Russian language. Indeed, after years of censorship and self-censorship in the Soviet Union,  a job at Radio Liberty for a journalist or critic often provided the first opportunity for honest commentary. It enabled them to earn a decent living and place the spotlight of journalistic truth on the dark corners of Soviet life.  Having been unwilling participants in the dishonesty of the Soviet system, the exiled commentators could draw on years of experience to inform their listeners about the corruption of Soviet science, Soviet sport, and Soviet culture and the facts about the natural disasters and man-made catastrophes that were systematically covered up by Soviet authorities (P, Xii) ."


Xii: Sports reporter with stories in the drawer


Evgeny Rubin: "Sports journalism in the Soviet Union was dishonest, especially where the professionalism of so-call amateur athletes was concerned. We couldn't write about how athletes were devoting their entire life to sports; we had to write how they were students or soldiers or workers who came to the stadium after working hours to train. All of this was untrue, but we had to write it anyway. And we had to ignore how the officials were sending adult athletes to tournaments supposedly reserved for young people. We had to lie at every level, and we always had the censors looking over our shoulders. Any mistakes and I could be fired" (P, Xiii)


RFE officially launched May Day 1951


Pavel Tigrid (formerly of BBC)


"Tigrid pulled no punches in spelling out Radio Free Europe's methods for dealing with the Communist enemy. 'Our station has, above all, a fighting and political mission." he explained. "Our offensive is directed against Communism and Sovietism, against the representative of the terrorist regimes..." It goes on if you need it


8: Kennan father of project


13: Model for RFE was Radio in the American sector began in 1946 as wired radio service for Germans living in American sector of Berlin


"It broadcast news, commentary and cultural programs that were unavailable in the censored media of the German Democratic Republic."


FEC- Free Europe Commission


"The FEC;s initial radio plans were modest . Exiled leaders were placed before a microphone and given free rein to speak to their countrymen." (P, 17)


By July 1950: "It was to be a "channel of communication by radio with the prisoner states over which things might be said which are in the national interest to have said, but that an official organ of government such as the voice could not itself say.' Those who would speak over the RFE microphone would 'authentic voices of exiled political and intellectual leaders and occasionally the voices of lesser-known or unknown exiles." 


Crusade for freedom-fundraising "freedom dollars" 


24: "The CIA was the conduit for the bulk of RFE's budget and practically all of RL's budget during the stations' first two decades of existence." 


27-30: CIA involvement


36: mission change w/ outbreak of Korea not just dissidents any more


FEC board: 'The aim of Radio Free Europe is primarily to supplement the Voice of america in the field of propaganda, using the voices of exiled leaders incidentally as this seems consistent with its fundamental purposes. (P, 36)"


"Thus even before it inaugurated its full broadcast schedule, RFE had begun to construct a news and intelifence gatherin operation that would become the envy of scholars and journalists all over the world. In addition to the major Western newspapers, wire services and magazines, RDE acquitted a long list of Communist bloc publications, right down to small provincial weeklies . The next step was to set up a series of monitoring stations in which broadcasts from the official Communist radio stations were recorded, transcribed, and sent to the desk editors as background information. Although it was eventually centralized in the Munich headquarters, monitoring was at first organized on a catch-as-can basis. For example, on man, supplied with a room and and typewriter , took care of the monitoring for the entire Czechoslovak regime radio output. To monitor Romanian and Bulgarian radio broadcasts, a staff was hired in Istanbul; it took nearly a week for the staff's transcripts to reach RFE headquarters in New York. (P,38)" 


"In addition to its monitoring program, RFE opened a network of news and information bureaus throughout Western Europe. The chief of each bureau was an English-speaking journalist; the rest of the staff were usually exiles. THe bureaus eventually came to function like normal news operation, supplying reports relevant to the audience countries from London, Bonn, Rome and PAris. At first, however, the bureaus' main purpose was intelligence gathering. THe original plan called for a division of intelligence gathering between the CIA and RFE, with the CIA providing the general information about conditions behind the Iron Curtain and RFE providing material elicted in interviews with defecors. Thus the decision on where to locate the bureaus depended less on the news potential of the city than on how often it was frequented by travelers or refugees from the East. Bureaus were opened in Hamburg and Stockholm because these cities were often visited by ships from Poland. A bureau was opened in Istanbul because it was the destination of travelers and refugees from Bulgaria and Romania. Bureaus were opened in various cities in Austria because of their proximity to the Hungarian border. THe bureau staff conducted in-depth interviews with travelers and often employed standard defector interrogation techniques. Some of the information was sent to Munich as new reports, but sometimes the format resembled interrogation or intelligence reports. Because civic life was heavily politicized under communism, the inquiries were quite broad. ...." (P 39)


"Radio Free Europe did not maintain paid agents inside the Iron Curtain. It did, however, retain a network of well-connected émigrés in PAris, Vienna, Rome, and other European cities who kept abreast of political developments through contacts within the East European countries. THese agents would pass along information gathered from their various sources, and the material would then be analyzed and occasionally used in special broadcasts about internal conditions in the audience countries. RFE also recieved information on developments within the Communist world from letters sent to its special Box 52-20 in Munich. Listeners were invited to write to this address, and the information was sometimes was used in RFE's Messages programs, in which announcers would reveal the names of Communist spies or informers." (P,40)


41: huge autonomy


46-loyal fan base


"Reports from inside the Iron Curtain indicated that RFE was most appreciated for its harsh brand of anticommunism; at the top of the list of favorite programs were the Messages broadcasts, in which RFE announcers denounced by name Communist spies and informers....(P,47)"


"Radio Free Europe was also gaining listeners by simply broadcasting reports about important news items that the Communist media either ignored or presented hours or even days later than the Western broadcasting stations. According to an internal survey conducted in 1953, the Voice of Free Hungary aired items about the free world an average of forty-four hours earlier than Communist media, and thirteen hours earlier on items about Communist countries. In some cases, the differences were astonishing. ...Examples (47)


47: appeal to workers, but as dissent picked up,  appealed to them.


61: balloon project


92: Secret Speech
Published in NYT


"Though not given exclusive rights to the secret speech, RFE nevertheless played an important role in acquainting its listeners with Khrushchev's anti-Stalin message. The text was read over the air night and day, accompanied by commentaries that speculated on its implications for communism's future. (p, 92) " circulated by balloon


153: March 1953 "Radio Liberty from Bolshevism"
specifically Soviet focused 


155: in the image of RFE 









No comments:

Post a Comment