EFFORTS OF RADIO MOSCOW TO ADD VARIETY TO ITS BROADCASTS

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP80-00809A000500730231-1
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
R
Document Page Count: 
2
Document Creation Date: 
December 21, 2016
Document Release Date: 
September 4, 2003
Sequence Number: 
231
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
November 11, 1998
Content Type: 
REPORT
File: 
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PDF icon CIA-RDP80-00809A000500730231-1.pdf123.28 KB
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Approved For Release 2008/03/03 :CIA-RrDP80-00809A000500730231-1 CLASSIFICATION RESTRICTED:~~1 i1~ge~ ~:~ c~nl CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY ', INFORMATION FROM FOREIGN DOCUMENTS OR RAD10 BROADCASTS SUBJECT EFFORTS OF RADIO MOSCOW TO ADD '~TARIETY TO ITS BROADCASTS HOW PUBLISHED WHERE PUBLISHED DATE PUBLISHED LANGUAGE THIS UOCUN [Ni CONTAIN! IN1011MATION A1f[CTING TI1l NATIONAL O[F[N![ 01 Tn[ UNITCD STAi[! ITITNIN TNl NIANING Of [t /IONAiC ACT t0 Y. 3 [.. ]1 ANp ][. AS AN[NUI O. IT\ TNANSf113110N 011 TNt .l [Y[LATION 01 ITS CO 11T[NTS IN ANT t1ANN[N TD AN UNAUTNO\II[0 /[NSON I] /NO~ NIlIT[O AT I.AN. N[/NOOU CTION 0/ TNIf /ONN IS /NONIf IT[0 DATE DIST. ~ August 1951 N0. OF PAGES 2 SUPPLEMENT TO REPORT N0. ' THIS IS UNEVALUATED INFORMATION ' In .recent months Radio Moscow has initiated several. changes in format and tone that suggest a desire to heighten listener interest in its broadcasts. Those innovations includes the use of literary personalities'havii~g symbolic signi.f.ican4e and presumed appeal for particular audienceo, namely'Cood So].iiier Schweili and Martin Chuzzlewit; the use of a group of short "notes" within s given transmission instead of one long commentary; anfl the more frequent use of recorded mi.orophone interviews, e. g., with trade union delegates and prisoners of war. ,~; ThisS Spring a series of broadcasts to Czechoslovskfa described the adventures in America and Germany of a present-day ";good Soldier Schweik.? The broadcasts denounced American aggression, but they Incorporated some of the satire and ridicule that characterized the novel. A curront series of broadcasts to the TTnitecl Kingdom describe Martin Chuzzlewt.t's adventures on a return trip to .Americo. The tone of ~tr-e series is set by the incidentjwhich marks Chuzzlewit's arrival in New York: "The ship had Just docked. Suddenly a stentorian voice sounded aLaost in oLtr ears. 'How d'ya like our free country,' it said. 'Remember that if you don't like it, we'll have to put you behind bars.? We turned involuntarily and saw e~tanding Just behind us a stocky gentleman with a verg red face aid small eyes that gleamed angrily from out of bushy eyebrows. Seeing our surprise he introduced himselfo ?I'm Senator. McCar`tby,A he explained. 'In view of the number ,of Red agents trying.to get into our country the members of our great Senate have taken a val3.ant decision. We've split up into groups and some to the main ports of America so as to catch the Reds ourselves as they arrive from your corrupt and depraved Europe."' The commentary, broadcast only in Gex?man 9nr1 in English to the U. K., is replete with references to police persecution in America and with allusions to American criticirims of European culture. The militaristic nature of America'o much- vaunted prosperity is pointed out. in documentation of implicit charges of lmerican aggrerZSion . ', Thp satirical tone vged in the Schweik?-Chuzzlewit series i.4 also a departure from the Moscow stereotype. Such an approach has appeared only rarely in the past; but it now appears with increasing frequency. Attacks on Tito now include satirical references. And a commentary broadcast in late July to several audiences described the concern of a "Mr. Atom Bomb" over the fact. that the public is not charged for the air it breathes. "Mr. Atom.Bomb," an American Munitions manufacturer, is said 'to believe that the free usd of air is socialistic and will lead the masses to expect frree land. He therefore develops a "nasometer" which will be worn by every- o71e and ~rhich will measure air intake, thin enabling theoapitaliets to charge for call air breathed. +~r~ N A1~~ ~" CLASSIFICATION RBSTRIC~D !, ~rAre ~ nnvY LARMY IKI AIR I~ NSRB~_ FBI DISTRIBUTION I Approved For Release 2008/03/03 :CIA-RDP80-00809A000500730231-1 Approved For Release 12008/03/03 :CIA-RDP80-00809A000500730231-1 ' RESTRICTED I 2 - r f i The other changes in Soviet broadcasting patterns--the use of short notes instead o? the exclusive use of long comneztaries and the use of microphone interviews--add further variety to the transmissions. The short notes have been common since Jhne in propaganda concerning the Korean war.1l They are now being used in propaganda attacks on Tito. Racorded interviews are broadcast with increasing frequency and have brought to Moscow's "microphone" trade union delegates to the USSR and American prisoners of war ca tared in Korea. Thi's device not only adds non-Soviet observers tc~btoscow~s .ommentator-authorities, it also gives listeners a greater variety of voices. RESTRICTED Approved For Release 2008/03/03 :CIA-RDP80-00809A000500730231-1