|
VOA in the Postwar Years Printer Friendly Version E-mail this article to a friend Reductions and Eliminations in the Language Services
The reluctant support for international broadcasting disappeared with the escalation of the Cold War and hostile international broadcasting by the Soviet bloc and the Berlin Blockade in 1948. The enactment of the United States Information and Educational
A Voice of Freedom or Fear For the next two years, officials in the U.S. government debated the proper role of VOA. Was it to report the news and reflect America, or was it to be used as an instrument of U.S. foreign policy and as a "weapon" against the Soviet Union? Congress saw it increasingly as fulfilling the latter role. With the outbreak of the Korean War in 1950, VOA added new language services and developed plans to construct transmitter complexes on both the east and west coasts of the United States. By mid-1951, VOA’s broadcasts expanded to forty-five languages, and nearly 400 hours weekly on the air. In early 1953, Senator Joseph McCarthy chaired several weeks of hearings to investigate programming and engineering practices at VOA and allegations that there were "subversives on the staff guilty of negligence favoring communism." While the charges of subversive activity were never proven, widespread dismissals and resignations followed. In the wake of the congressional hearings, VOA's budget was reduced, the transmitter construction program was halted and a number of language services were terminated. A New Beginning
In 1959, VOA inaugurated Special English - slow-paced, simplified English broadcasts — to facilitate comprehension for millions of listeners. Special English programs quickly became some of the most popular on VOA, and they retain that status today. Visit the Special English web page for information about how VOA helps people master American English. The closing of the decade brought increased efforts to enshrine VOA’s broadcast principles in a formal document, thus affirming VOA’s independence and credibility. |