By Young Kim
Wednesday, March 19, 2025
China, North Korea, Russia, and Iran received welcome
news over the weekend when the Trump administration issued an executive order for the U.S. Agency
for Global Media (USAGM) “to be eliminated to the maximum extent consistent
with applicable law.”
Reforms at the USAGM are necessary, but entirely gutting
the agency silences the voices of freedom-loving people around the world that
have been oppressed by the Chinese Communist Party, Kim Jong-un, the Kremlin,
the ayatollahs, and other repressive regimes dating back to the mid-20th
century.
Ending the Agency for Global Media is not the answer. We
must restore the USAGM to its intended purpose: a soft-power tool that promotes
America’s national security interests.
As the administration works to rein in federal spending,
eyeing reform within the USAGM is understandable, as certain agency platforms
have strayed away from their core mission of supporting freedom and democracy
abroad. For example, why was Voice of America advising staff members to avoid
calling Hamas “terrorists” after the October 7 attack on Israel, discussing “white privilege,” or posting biased political views?
This also comes at a time when Americans’ trust in media
is at a record low, with a recent Gallup survey revealing that just 31 percent
of Americans exhibit “a great deal” or “fair amount” of confidence in our own
media’s ability to report the news fairly.
There has long been bipartisan appetite for USAGM reform.
In 2013, then–Secretary of State Hillary Clinton noted that the agency’s broadcasting
was “practically defunct in terms of its capacity to be able to tell a message
around the world.”
We cannot forget the original purpose of these programs:
to promote freedom and America’s national security interests. Today’s threats
are not confined to land, sea, air, space, and cyberspace. We are in an
information war. If the truth is not broadcast around the world, we are losing,
and propaganda and disinformation by our adversaries fill the void.
USAGM platforms have uncovered human-rights abuses by
authoritarian regimes. For example, Radio Free Asia’s Uyghur Service broke the news that CCP authorities in
the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region were persecuting Uyghurs in “reeducation
camps.” RFA’s Uyghur Service is the only Uyghur-language news outlet that is
independent of the CCP’s influence. RFA also revealed the horrors happening inside
North Korean gulags or detention camps.
Radio Free Asia exposed the CCP’s cover-up of Covid-19
deaths at the beginning of the pandemic, was the first Korean-language outlet
to report on North Korean soldiers joining Russian forces in Vladimir
Putin’s war on Ukraine, and has covered disinformation campaigns
against Taiwan, among other objective coverage.
RFA is a trusted source on the ground in China, Myanmar,
North Korea, Cambodia, Vietnam, and Laos, and the broadcasting agency has
experienced historic growth in online engagement, amassing 257 million website
views in 2024 — a nearly 20 percent increase from 2023. Meanwhile, its
following across all social-media platforms has grown to 38.1 million.
Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty broadcasts directly to
Eastern European countries, including Russia and Ukraine, and has been vital to
break through noise, directly reaching civilians during Russia’s unprovoked
invasion of Ukraine. Its website warns Russian and Ukrainian readers
that the Russian government could impose “fines or imprisonment” for liking or
sharing its content.
Voice of America was founded in 1942 to counter Nazi
propaganda during World War II and is now the largest U.S. international
broadcaster, reaching 354 million people a week in nearly 50 languages through
3,500 affiliate stations around the world.
Regimes have not succeeded in cutting off USAGM’s access
to areas around the world to advance America’s interests; the United States’
making the first move to do so could have drastic consequences.
Growing up in South Korea in the aftermath of the Korean
War, I remember as a young girl seeing U.S. troops drive through my
neighborhood throwing Nestlé chocolates out of their trucks. This was my first
taste of the freedom the United States embodies. Decades later, I came here
legally with my family and ended up working for former House Foreign Affairs
Committee Chairman Ed Royce on Asian Affairs, including on legislation to make
Radio Free Asia permanent.
As a member of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, and
as chairwoman of the Subcommittee on East Asia and the Pacific, I will work to
protect and strengthen these platforms as we undergo a reauthorization of State
Department funding and streamline our federal government to advance our
national interests and save taxpayer dollars.
The time is now to revamp the U.S. Agency for Global
Media and restore it to its intended purpose. Reform, not elimination, is the
right way forward to protect our national security.
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