Preface by the editors
Foreword by Timothy Garton Ash
Introduction by A. Ross Johnson
PART ONE: GOALS OF THE BROADCASTS
Chapter One: RFE’s Early Years: Evolution of Broadcast Policy and Evidence of Broadcast Impact, Paul B. Henze
Chapter Two: Goals of Radio Liberty, Gene Sosin
Chapter Three: The Voice of America: A Brief Cold War History, Alan L. Heil Jr.
PART TWO: JAMMING AND AUDIENCES
Chapter Four: Cold War Radio Jamming, George W. Woodard
Appendix A: Types of Jamming
Appendix B: An Example of a Shortwave Broadcasting Station During the Cold War
Chapter Five: The Audience to Western Broadcasts to the USSR During the Cold War: An External Perspective, R. Eugene Parta
Chapter Six: The Foreign Radio Audience in the USSR During the Cold War: An Internal Perspective, Elena I. Bashkirova
Chapter Seven: The Audience to Western Broadcasts to Poland During the Cold War, Lechoslaw Gawlikowski (with Yvette Neisser Moreno)
Appendix C: Weekly Listening Rates for Major Western Broadcasters to Poland, Hungary, Czechoslovakia, Romania, Bulgaria and the USSR During the Cold War
PART THREE: IMPACT OF WESTERN BROADCASTS IN EASTERN EUROPE
Chapter Eight: Radio Free Europe in the Eyes of the Polish Communist Elite, Jane Leftwich Curry
Chapter Nine: Polish Regime Countermeasures Against Radio Free Europe, Pawel Machcewicz
Chapter Ten: Radio Free Europe’s Impact in Romania During the Cold War, Nestor Ratesh
Chapter Eleven: Ceausescu’s War Against Our Ears, Germina Nagat
Chapter Twelve: Just Noise? Impact of Radio Free Europe in Hungary, István Rév
Chapter Thirteen: Bulgarian Regime Countermeasures Against Radio Free Europe, Jordan Baev
PART FOUR: IMPACT OF WESTERN BROADCASTS IN THE USSR
Chapter Fourteen: Soviet Reactions to Foreign Broadcasting in the 1950s, Vladimir Tolz (with Julie Corwin)
Chapter Fifteen: Foreign Media, the Soviet Western Frontier, and the Hungarian and Czechoslovak Crises, Amir Weiner
Chapter Sixteen: Water Shaping the Rock: Cold War Broadcasting Impact in Latvia, Peter Zvagulis
PART FIVE: CONCLUSIONS
Chapter Seventeen: Cold War International Broadcasting and the Road to Democracy. A. Ross Johnson and R. Eugene Parta
PART SIX: DOCUMENTS FROM EAST EUROPEAN AND SOVIET ARCHIVES
I. Regime Perceptions of Western Broadcasters
Bulgaria
1. 1977. Interior Ministry Analysis of Foreign Propaganda against Bulgaria
2. 1986. Interior Ministry Report on the Staff of the Bulgarian Service of RFE
3. 1989. Bulgarian Politburo Discussion on RFE Monitoring Reports
German Democratic Republic
4. 1970. Stasi Report on West German Government’s Attitude to RFE and RL
Hungary
5. 1973. Report to Politburo and Politburo Resolution on Fight against “Imperialist Propaganda”
6. 1978. Hungarian Central Committee Discusses Implementation of 1973 Resolution
Romania
7. 1964. Securitate Reports on RFE’s Encouragement of Romanian Independence from USSR
Poland
8. 1966. Letter from Army Main Political Administration to Interior Minister on “Hostile” Radio Propaganda
9. 1967. Foreign Intelligence Report on RFE
10. 1976. Analysis of Western Radio “Propaganda” Directed at Poland