|
CLOSE-UP
Today's topic: International broadcasts By Warren P. Strobel And William Douglas MCCLATCHY NEWSPAPERS
WASHINGTON - In
another indication that some in the Bush administration are pushing for
a more confrontational policy toward Iran, a Pentagon unit has drafted
a report charging that U.S. international broadcasts into Iran aren't
tough enough on the Muslim regime.
The report, a draft of which McClatchy Newspapers obtained this
week, appears to be a gambit by some officials in Defense Secretary
Donald Rumsfeld's office and elsewhere to gain sway over television and
radio broadcasts into Iran, one of the few direct tools the United
States has to reach the Iranian people.
The report has circulated on Capitol Hill. It accuses the Voice of
America's Persian TV service and Radio Farda, a U.S. government
Farsi-language broadcast, of taking a soft line toward Iranian
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's regime and not giving adequate time to
government critics.
U.S. broadcasting officials and others who've read the report said it's riddled with errors.
They also see it as a thinly veiled attack on the independence of
U.S. international broadcasting, which by law is supposed to represent
a balanced view of the United States and provide objective news.
"The author of this report is as qualified to write a report on
programming to Iran as I would be to write a report covering the
operations of the 101st Airborne Division," Kenneth Y. Tomlinson,
chairman of the Broadcasting Board of Governors, said in a statement
yesterday.
Larry Hart, a spokesman for the board, which oversees U.S.
non-military international broadcasting, said that the radio and TV
operations have covered Iran's human rights abuses extensively and have
featured appearances by dissidents -- who sometimes telephoned from
Iranian jails.
Surveys have shown that Radio Farda is the most-listened-to international radio broadcast into Iran, Hart said.
Three U.S. government officials identified the author of the report
as Ladan Archin, a civilian Iran specialist who works for Rumsfeld.
Archin was unavailable for comment. She works in a recently established Pentagon unit known as the Iran directorate.
Lt. Col. Mark Ballesteros, a Pentagon spokesman, said last week that
the unit was established this spring as part of a government-wide
reorganization aimed at better promoting democracy in Iran. He
confirmed last night that Archin had been asked to prepare the report.
"It was meant to be a look at how the program was working and to
determine if it was an effective use of taxpayer dollars," Ballesteros
said.
Critics charge that the unit resembles the pre-Iraq-war Office of
Special Plans, which received intelligence reports directly from Iraqi
exile groups, bypassing U.S. intelligence agencies, which distrusted
the exiles. Many of the reports proved to be fabricated or exaggerated.
Some of the directorate's staff members worked in the now-defunct
Office of Special Plans, and some intelligence officials fear that
directorate also is maintaining unofficial ties to questionable exiles
and groups.
U.S. government radio and TV broadcasting to Iran has expanded significantly in recent years.
Some conservatives, including former House Speaker Newt Gingrich,
have called for ramped-up broadcasting aimed at overthrowing the
clerics who run Iran.
Veterans of government broadcasting say that not even during the
Cold War -- with the exception of the 1956 uprising in Hungary -- did
such news organizations as the Voice of America, Radio Free Europe and
Radio Liberty call for the overthrow of adversary governments. Rather,
they said, they serve as sources of objective news and models of how
democracies operate.
Archin's report states that while VOA's Persian TV service "often
invites guests who defend the Islamic Republic (of Iran)'s version of
issues, it consistently fails to maintain a balance by inviting
informed guests who represent another perspective on the same issue."
Hart, the Broadcasting Board of Governors spokesman, disputed that
and said Archin chose a handful of the 180 guests who appeared on the
station's programs during her period of study. Various viewpoints were
represented, he said. "Does that mean they're in full accord with U.S.
foreign polices? No. Those are two different things," he said.
Archin also wrote that Radio Farda, which is managed separately from
the TV service, recently hired journalists whose most recent experience
was with Iran's state-run news agencies. That is incorrect, Hart said.
Also incorrect, he said, is the report's contention that "neither station is a primary source of news for Iranians."
A March 2006 telephone survey of 2,003 Iranian adults found that
13.5 percent of them had listened to Radio Farda in the previous week,
compared with 5.6 percent for BBC Radio and 4.5 percent for VOA Radio.
Archin also criticized Joyce Davis, the radio's manager in Prague, and said she doesn't speak Farsi.
Davis, who worked in the Washington bureau of Knight Ridder, which
has since been acquired by McClatchy, declined comment. But colleagues
said the Arabic-speaking journalist is taking Farsi courses.
|