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From: jkp@cs.HUT.FI (Jyrki Kuoppala)
Subject: [a.p.usa.misc] CLINTON: Statement on Radio Free Europe 6.15.93
In-Reply-To: Clinton-HQ@Campaign92.Org (The White House)
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Uudelleenl{hetys ryhmist{ alt.politics.reform,alt.politics.usa.misc:

From: Clinton-HQ@Campaign92.Org (The White House)
Subject: CLINTON: Statement on Radio Free Europe 6.15.93
Date: 16 Jun 1993 04:58:16 -0400
Organization: MIT Artificial Intelligence Lab
Message-ID: <1vmnb8INN94q@life.ai.mit.edu>



                         THE WHITE HOUSE

                  Office of the Press Secretary

_________________________________________________________________

For Immediate Release                               June 15, 1993


                    STATEMENT BY THE PRESIDENT


Today, I am pleased to take an important step in the promotion of 
democracy by putting in place my proposal for strengthening one 
of the most effective foreign policy tools we have, our 
international broadcasting programs.  For the spread of our 
values, our ideas and our democratic way of life can help 
strengthen our security and support others around the world in 
their struggle for freedom.  

I am pleased to be joined in this effort by the Director of the 
U.S. Information Agency, Dr. Joseph Duffey, and the Chair of the 
Board of International Broadcasting, Congressman Dan Mica.  These 
programs have been and will be an essential part of our efforts 
to promote democracy and advance America's interests abroad.

Our plan proposes a proud rebirth of America's broadcasting 
programs to reflect this post-Cold War era.  Our proposal 
preserves Radio Free Europe and Radio Liberty, which played such 
an important role in bringing freedom to Central and Eastern 
Europe and to the states of the former Soviet Union.  It retains 
our other important broadcasting services, such as Voice of 
America, Radio Marti and TV Marti which have played such an 
important role in bringing truth and hope abroad.  And our plan 
reorganizes our foreign broadcasting services to make them 
stronger, more efficient and more capable of meeting this era's 
new challenges of fostering democracy and civic reconstruction.

Our victory in the Cold War was due not only to the strength of 
our forces but also to the power of our ideas.  While we acted to 
contain Soviet expansionism, we also sought to inspire freedom's 
spirit where repression reigned.  Voice of America long played an 
important role in that effort.  And to advance that same cause, 
40 years ago we began a radio service, Radio Liberty, which aimed 
to join freedom's advocates behind the Iron Curtain with freedom-
loving Americans.  The founders of this and the other American 
radio services understood that truth is one of our most potent 
weapons in the fight against communism and totalitarianism.

The heroes of the Cold War's end, such as Polish President Lech 
Walesa and Czech President Vaclav Havel, have often noted the 
importance they attach to Radio Free Europe and Radio Liberty to 
their own historic work on behalf of liberty and democracy.

Radio Free Europe and Radio Liberty, together with our other 
broadcasting services, have persistently challenged the ability 
of repressive leaders to deny history, disfigure truth and 
manipulate minds.  From Havana to Ho Chi Minh City, from Pretoria 
to Prague, our foreign broadcast services helped prove a lesson 
that Americans must never forget:  an informed and enlightened 
populace is the mightiest adversary tyranny can ever face.  

Today, the challenges have changed for the states that were once 
held captive behind the Iron Curtain.  Freedom's work is not 
completed.  Most of these states are undergoing a difficult 
process of consolidating democracy's gains and building 
prosperity's foundations.  The resulting economic and political 
tensions in many of these nations have bred demagogues and 
warlords who threaten to reverse democracy's recent progress.  

These states and many others still need a source of news that is 
reliably free from the manipulation of their own governments.  No 
nation has more credibility to provide such news than the United 
States.  That is why our radio and other international 
broadcasting services will continue to be vital as we seek to 
help strengthen new democracies and bolster the development of 
democratic institutions where they do not yet exist.  

The plan we are announcing today will make those services 
stronger and better suited to this era:

--   We will continue the operation of Radio Free Europe and 
     Radio Liberty.  Many of our broadcasting services, including 
     both of these radios and Voice of America, will undergo some 
     changes in structure and budget.

--   We will create a new and independent Board of Governors that 
     will oversee not only Radio Free Europe and Radio Liberty, 
     but the Voice of America and other foreign broadcasting 
     services as well.  Located within the United States 
     Information Agency, it will replace and perform similar 
     tasks to the Board of International Broadcasting.  The new 
     Board, which the President shall appoint with the advice and 
     consent of the Senate, will ensure independence, coherence, 
     quality and journalistic integrity in our surrogate and 
     other broadcast services.

--   This new Board will play an important role in determining 
     the best mix of broadcasting functions:  telling America's 
     story to the rest of the world; reporting objective 
     international news; providing accurate in-country news where 
     a free press is not yet developed; and from time to time 
     helping to transmit our government's official views abroad.

--   This new Board will also take a leadership role in helping 
     to create a new Asian Democracy Radio to provide accurate 
     local and international information for the people of Asia 
     whose governments still suppress the truth.  

--   In addition, we will continue the good work of our important 
     broadcasting services aimed at speeding the arrival of 
     freedom in Cuba -- Radio Marti and TV Marti.  The current 
     structure of these entities and their boards will remain.


--   We will encourage the establishment of independent news-
     gathering and broadcast operations in the countries of 
     Eastern Europe and the new independent states themselves --
     where they can be rewoven into the fabric of democratic 
     life.

By bringing our broadcasting resources together under one roof, 
we can achieve substantial savings, while at the same time 
providing for greater flexibility to target and shape our 
broadcasts as may be warranted by changing international 
circumstances and audience interests.  We can also take better 
advantage of the remarkable technological developments in world-
wide broadcasting that are imminent.

The plan we are announcing today was developed through the hard 
work and cooperation of many individuals, but I particularly want 
to acknowledge the leadership of Congressman Dan Mica and 
Dr. Duffey.  I also want to acknowledge the high degree of 
professionalism and dedication among those individuals who have 
done so much to create the excellence of the Voice of America, 
Radio Free Europe and Radio Liberty and our other broadcasting 
services.  They spent years of their lives, and often risked 
their own lives, to bring accurate news and the message of 
democracy to people who have been denied both, and we will 
continue to rely on their excellent service.
 
I have said that my foreign policy is premised on promoting 
democracy, improving our security and revitalizing our economy.  
The plan we are announcing today assists us in doing all three.  


                              # # #





