Foreign Relations Authorization Act, Fiscal Years 1994 and 1995
Arms Control and Nonproliferation Act of 1994
Cambodian Genocide Justice Act
Middle East Peace Facilitation Act of 1994
Mike Mansfield Fellowship Act
Nuclear Proliferation Prevention Act of 1994
Protection and Reduction of Government Secrecy Act
Spoils of War Act of 1994
Long title
An Act to authorize appropriations for the Department of State, the United States Information Agency, and related agencies, to authorize appropriations for foreign assistance programs, and for other purposes.
Passed the House on June 22, 1993 (273-144, Roll call vote 252, via Clerk.House.gov)
Passed the Senate on February 2, 1994 (92-8 Roll call vote 18, via Senate.gov, in lieu of S. 1281)
Reported by the joint conference committee on April 25, 1994; agreed to by the House on April 28, 1994 (agreed voice vote) and by the Senate on April 28, 1994 (agreed unanimous consent)
Signed into law by President Bill Clinton on April 30, 1994
In 1958, President Eisenhower in an address to the United Nations proposed monitoring radio broadcasts:
I believe that this Assembly should ... consider means for monitoring the radio broadcasts directed across national frontiers in the troubled Near East area. It should then examine complaints from these nations which consider their national security jeopardized by external propaganda.[3]
In the 1960s, President Kennedy to build an international broadcasting arm of the United States to as a way to promote foreign policy and overthrow communism.[4] In 1976, President Gerald Ford signed the Voice of America charter that established it as the leading branch of US international broadcasting.
In 1993, the Clinton Administration proposed cutting the budget for Radio Free Europe and Radio Liberty in order to reduce budget expenditures.[1] However, after working with the Congress, the International Broadcasting Act was born.
In this law, the president appoints one member of the board as the chairman of the board. The Secretary of State also serves on the board.[7]
Besides combining current radio service, this act also created the Radio Free Asia – a network aimed at Burma, China, Cambodia, Laos, North Korea, and Vietnam.[8]
Congressional updates
In September 2009, the 111th Congress amended the International Broadcasting Act to allow a one-year extension of the operation of Radio Free Asia.[9]
In 2002, the Act was amended to include the Radio Free Afghanistan.[7]
In May 1994, the president announce the continuation of Radio Free Asia after 2009 was dependent on its increased international broadcasting and ability to reach its audience.[10]
References
^ abRaghavan, Sudarsan V., Stephen S. Johnson, Kristi K. Bahrenburg. Sending cross-border static: on the fate of Radio Free Europe and the influence of international broadcasting. Journal of International Affairs, Vol. 47, 1993.
^United States International Broadcasting Act, Pub. L. No. 103-236, title. III.
^Dept of State Bulletin 337-342 at 339. 1958 Statement to the UN, August 1958.
^Jon T. Powell, "Towards a Negotiable Definition of Propaganda for International Agreements Related to Direct Broadcast Satellites," Law & Contemporary Problems 45 (1982): 3, 25-26.
^Price, Monroe. The Transformation of international broadcasting. Global Media and National Controls: Rethinking the Role of the State, MIT Press, 2002.
^Bill Text Versions for the 111th Congress, 2009 - 2010. The Library of Congress.[1]
^Executive Order 12, 850, 3 C.F.R. 606, 607 § 1(b).
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