Updated: 07/06/2010

Film, Radio and TV - 21

 

 

 

 

International

Short-Wave

 

 

>>Day and night, signals from hundreds of high-powered short-wave transmitters traverse the earth with thousands of programs in more than 100 languages.

Most North American radios do not come equipped with the ability to receive these signals. Fact is, you have to go out of your way to find radios that can tune into short-wave.

However, this programming has often changed the course of world events.

Some countries have been so afraid of the information in these short-wave programs that they have spent billions of dollars to jam (electronically block it out) the broadcasts.

North Americans, whose radios typically only receive AM and FM broadcasts, know little about these "battles in the ethers." Even in this Internet age a significant percentage of the world's population still depends on international short-wave for their information.

>>In this module we will not be focusing on the hundreds-of-thousands of relatively low-power amateur transmitters operated by individuals around the world. This type of short wave use, commonly referred to as ham radio, is primarily a point-to-point service and is generally considered a hobby.

Even so, ham radio operators are frequently called into service during disasters to relay critical information. Short wave radio can hook people up via telephones just as the Internet can through services such as Skype.

Ham radio operators are often the first to tell the world about disasters and medical emergencies. Although these operators use short-wave frequencies, in this module we'll focus on the high-powered, mass media-type, transmitters operated by governments, corporations, and private agencies -- so called international short-wave.
 

What Is International Short-Wave?

>>Permanent, high-powered short-wave broadcast sites typically involve acres of huge antenna arrays like the one shown here.

 The largest sites depend on miles of wire suspended in the air, as well as miles of buried wire serving as electrical ground systems.

Using these arrays, international short-wave stations direct their signals largely toward the ionosphere. Through careful calculations involving electronic directionalizing, power, and atmospheric conditions, these antennas aim their signals so they will come down on specific target areas around the world.

>>From the illustration below you can see how these signals can bounce (refract) off of the ionosphere — even multiple times — and land thousands of miles away. Recall that ionospheric refraction is primarily a nighttime phenomenon.

ionispheric refraction

>>The transmitting frequencies used for international short-wave are higher than the normal medium wave (MW) frequencies used for standard AM radio. Being higher in frequency, the waves are shorter in wavelength; thus, the term short-wave.

Rather than specific frequencies (as in, "this is the 980 spot on your radio dial") international short-wave frequencies first fall into bands (blocks of frequencies). If you want further information on these, - click here

short-wave makes for interesting listening. It's easy to tune into stations from all over the world, especially at night. A large percentage of these stations program in English and beam their signals to North America.

In addition to news and features about their country, some international stations provide on-air lessons in learning their country's language.

During the "cold war" you could clearly receive stations from  Russia and China, which were broadcasting more hours of short-wave programming than any other country -- much of it directly to North America.

Listening to newscasts from these Communist countries provided some amazing contrasts to the information most of us hear in the free world.

>>Most short-wave services are designed to serve political or religious interests.

One that is considered free of this type of "spin" is Britain's BBC World Service. This service broadcasts in 43 languages and is relied upon by people around the world for balanced, comprehensive news.

Although their production approach might be somewhat dull by U.S. standards, many consider the content better balanced and much "meatier" than U.S. network newscasts.

If you have Real Audio™ or RealPlayer™ installed in your browser you can - click here and hear BBC radio's World Service. A few other short-wave services, such as Radio Netherlands, provide similar news coverage.

>>In the United States the Voice of America (VOA) broadcasts in dozens of languages (listed below) from dozens of high-powered transmitters around the world.

One of the studios of VOA is shown on the right.

Rather than having the U.S. government disseminating news for its own people — a questionable practice for a democracy — all VOA transmitters are aimed outside of the country.

By - clicking here you can hear VOA programming (generally live). Click on "live streams." The site even has a - pronunciation guide for difficult names and terms.

A version of VOA in - Special English is read at a slower speed using a simplified vocabulary of about 1,500 words. This version is intended for people around the world who are not proficient in English.

VOA broadcasts in the following languages.

Albanian, Arabic, Armenian, Azerbaijani, Bangla, Bosnian, Brazilian, Portuguese, Bulgarian, Burmese Central Africa, Chinese, Creole, Croatian, Czech, Dari, English to Africa, Estonian Farsi, French, Georgian, Greek, Hausa, Hindi Horn of Africa, Hungarian, Indonesian, Khmer, Korean, Kurdish, Lao, Latvian, Lithuanian, Macedonian, Pashto, Polish, Portuguese to Africa, Romanian, Russian, Serbian, Slovak, Slovene, Spanish, Swahili, Thai, Tibetan, Turkish, Ukrainian, Urdu, Uzbek.

>>From the beginning, there has been an effort to insulate the Voice of America from political pressures. Its news content and balance are carefully evaluated. It was felt that this was the only way that it could maintain credibility around the world. 

Even so, it's alleged that political pressures have influenced content.  In 2004, after a number of rival government-sponsored international broadcast services were started that could bypass this scrutiny, VOA staff members threatened to strike. They felt that if pro-government bias was detected in government-sponsored international broadcast services that the credibility of all U.S. international broadcasting would suffer.

>>The audio sample links previously provided above are through the Internet, which generally provides a much better sound than an actual short-wave broadcast. – This segment from Radio New Zealand International was taken off the air.  It is available directly from this site and provides a more realistic short-wave listening experience. (This file requires that a RealPlayer program is installed on your computer.)

Religious Sort-Wave Broadcasts

>>Many other short-wave broadcasters are religious. These are typically evangelical and fundamentalist in nature, and supported by listener contributions. Some of the radio evangelists listed in the previous chapter can also be heard on short-wave.

The largest religious short-wave broadcaster is Vatican Radio, which programs in 40 different languages, makes use of two hundred journalists from 61 countries, and broadcasts into five continents. Pope Pius XI commissioned the inventor of radio, Guglielmo Marconi, to set up the Vatican radio system north of Rome more than 70 years ago.

 

Short-Wave Jamming Efforts

>>As we've noted, some countries fear a free flow of information. And, from the perspective of controlling beliefs through controlling information, their fears are justified.

The BBC and the VOA have broken major stories that were embarrassing to political dictatorships before their government agencies could prepare a version for their own broadcasts that was more acceptable to the leadership — although not necessarily true.

But, once a truth is out, it's difficult to convince people of "another truth," especially from a government suspected of not being totally truthful to start with.

" In many countries it has been illegal to listen to outside newscasts."

Some countries have gone so far as to imprison citizens caught listening to international short wave and even to issue radios that could only receive government approved stations.

However, many people in these countries defy bans on listening to international short wave. In rural areas scores of people have short-wave radios hidden under beds, under floorboards, and behind walls.  

Work slowdowns and drops in morale and productivity in totalitarian countries have come on the heels of major embarrassing revelations broadcast by such "free world" stations as VOA and the BBC. Defectors from these countries have verified that many of their people relied on these outside newscasts to find out what was really going on in the world -- and even in their own country.

With short-wave signals literally dropping down from the sky, it's difficult to block them out; but billions of dollars have been spent trying.

Jamming, or using transmitters on the same frequency, broadcasting such things as recordings of seagulls squawking, heavy machinery running, or just shrill annoying tones, have been common approaches in trying to obliterate outside newscasts and information. Less obvious is just broadcasting "throwaway" programs on the same frequency. (Generally, both programs become unintelligible.)

>>During the cold war the Soviet Union reportedly had 200 transmitting sites throughout Russia using more than 600,000,000 watts of power to jam the transmitters of Radio Free Europe (RFE) the VOA, the BBC World Service, Deutsche Welle, KOL Israel, and Radio Tirana. Additional jamming transmitters were operated by other nations throughout the former Warsaw Pact.

According to estimates made by the BBC, almost a billion dollars was spent each year by Russia alone in trying to jam outside broadcasts.

" The amount of money and effort that went into trying to block  foreign news and information speaks to the fear that some regimes have about a free flow of information."

As late as 2002, the Cuban government jammed the Voice of America's Radio Martí and the Chinese government jammed broadcasts made by adherents of Falun Gong.

Most of the countries that used to jam outside broadcasts have stopped and the focus has now shifted to trying to block materials from the Internet.

>>short-wave broadcasts don't have to rely on the huge antenna arrays pictured above. Lower-power transmitters on boats or in guerrilla hideouts (that regularly shift their locations) are sometimes used to try to destabilize governments. In fact, governments have fallen after short-wave and standard AM, medium wave broadcasts to citizens have been used to coordinate uprisings.

 

Staying in Touch With

Your Spies Around the World

>> We might assume that using short-wave to stay in touch with secret  operatives around the world has been outdated by digital technology. It turns out that this is not so, and for good reason.

Although it might be 1920's technology, there are many advantages to short-wave communications over the newer technologies. Unlike telephone or Internet connections, receiving a radio signal leaves no "fingerprint," no traceable phone connection, no IP address, and no other hint as to where the recipient might be. Plus, no fancy equipment is needed. 

You can buy a short-wave receiver for about $40 and since short-wave signals travel around the world and come down most everywhere, you can't track down who is listening.

As late as 2010, coded short-wave transmissions were originating from several counties, including Russia and Cuba.

Great Britain has publicly admitted that its foreign intelligence agency, MI6, still uses so-called "numbers" stations that transmit series of spoken or Morse code numbers that can only be decrypted by recipients in possession of the ever-changing code books .

The ten alleged Russian spies arrested in 2010 in the United States had apparently used short-wave broadcasts to receive instructions. (As of this writing that case was still being investigated by U.S. authorities.)

 

Embedding Secret Information

>> Germany jammed the BBC European service during the Second World War. During World War II, both sides regularly used secret short-wave transmitters, typically with coded messages, to get reports from, and issue orders to, compatriots behind enemy lines. The broadcast of certain music selections at certain times would be used to communicate information to spies. (Today, secret messages are often embedded into Internet music and photo files in a process called steganography.)

A less publicized audience for short-wave, consists of intelligence officers and agents who monitor short-wave broadcasts from suspect countries for hidden messages to foreign agents operating in the receiving country. There are agencies set up in the United States and Britain to monitor this.

In one case during World War II a desert cave outside of Landers, California where a hermit was living was blown up by law enforcement officials (with him in it) when it was assumed that the radio antenna he was using to get nearby stations in his remote location was some sort of a short-wave transmitter.

His radio (more knowledgeable people later determined) was only a basic AM radio receiver, and he was just a simple man who felt a need to get away from his former turbulent city life.


>>Although telephone, Internet, and satellite signals can be cut or monitored in a nation — and often are — short-wave signals are far more difficult to monitor and control. Plus, short-wave radios are relatively cheap and many people around the world can't afford a satellite receiver, or an Internet hookup.

>>This site lists the major international broadcasters. 


>>In the next module we'll look at commercial radio programming.
 
The next Matching Quiz will be after Module 23.


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