Congress Focused on Reforming U.S. International Broadcasting

Helle Dale /

After years of complaints about the lack of direction and mismanagement of U.S. International Broadcasting (USIB), the House Foreign Affairs Committee took a step toward long-overdue reform.

This morning the committee marked up H.R. 4490, the United States International Communications Act of 2014, a bipartisan piece of legislation introduced by committee chairman Ed Royce (R–CA) and ranking member Eliot Engel (D–NY). The bill passed unanimously on a voice vote and reflects years of deep-seated dissatisfaction with the way USIB has been run. Matching legislation is being worked up in the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.

At a time when Russia has ramped up its propaganda machine overwhelming U.S. capacity to reach the peoples of Ukraine, Crimea, and Russia itself, improved U.S. broadcasting capacity and public diplomacy strategy is urgently needed.

Stated Chairman Royce at the introduction of the bill:

So while our enemies are working 24/7 on their information campaigns, the organization at the helm of ours meets once a month. That’s a recipe for failure. Indeed, then Secretary Clinton told this Committee last year that the BBG [Broadcasting Board of Governors] is “practically defunct.” Reports from the Inspector General and [General Accountability Office] have agreed. As does nearly everyone with experience in this field, Republicans and Democrats alike.

The bill would achieve a number of important objectives, as outlined in a Heritage Issue Brief, “Time to Reform U.S. International Broadcasting”:

The good news is that Congress is finally engaged fully on improving USIB.