What is today the Maryland-based headquarters of the American Forces Network began on 26 May 1942 when the
War Department established the Armed Forces Radio Service (AFRS) in
Los Angeles, California, with
U.S. Army Colonel Tom Lewis in command. The original American Forces Network began on 4 July 1943 when AFRS established what is today AFN Europe in
London, England with U.S. Army Lieutenant Colonel Charles Gurney in command. A television service was first introduced in 1954 with a pilot station at
Limestone Air Force Base,
Maine. In 1954, the television mission of AFRS was officially recognized and AFRS (Armed Forces Radio Service) became AFRTS (Armed Forces Radio and Television Service).
Origins The first station to be under the control of the U.S. Armed Forces was
KGEI in San Francisco, whose origins come from a
GE exhibit, which in February 1939 started shortwave broadcasts aimed at the Philippines, which at the time were under American control. The station was used as a counterpoint to
Radio Tokyo and ultimately became a model for the army network following the invasion of Pearl Harbor in late 1941. The first radio station began in
Delta Junction, Alaska, on what was then known as
Fort Greely. It was called KODK and was operated by on base personnel. In the years just before
World War II, there were several radio stations based in American
military bases, but none were officially recognized until 1942. The success of these individual radio stations helped pave the way for the AFN. As such, there was no single station that could be called the "first" to sign on as an AFN station. About two months before the formal establishment of AFN, however, a station called "PCAN" began regular broadcast information service in the
Panama Canal Zone, primarily for troops on jungle
bivouac. The station, located at
Fort Clayton, was later to become part of AFRS, first simply as "Armed Forces Network" located at
Albrook Field.
World War II welcomes
Jane Russell to
Command Performance (1944). interviews actress
Alida Valli for one of the many programs produced by the Armed Forces Radio Service for broadcast to the troops overseas during World War II. and
Lauren Bacall being interviewed by the Armed Forces Radio Service The original AFN - present day AFN Europe - began broadcasting from
London during
World War II, using equipment and studio facilities borrowed from the
British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC). The first transmission to
U.S. troops began at 5:45 p.m. 4 July 1943, and included less than five hours of recorded shows, including a
BBC News and sports broadcast. That day,
T5 Syl Binkin became the first
U.S. military broadcaster heard over the air. The signal was sent from London via telephone lines to five regional
transmitters to reach U.S. troops in the
United Kingdom as they made preparations for
the invasion of
Nazi-occupied Europe. Fearing competition for civilian audiences, the BBC initially tried to impose restrictions on AFN broadcasts within Britain (transmissions were allowed only from American bases outside London and were limited to 50 watts of transmission power) and a minimum quota of British produced programming had to be carried. Nevertheless, AFN programs were widely enjoyed by the British civilian listeners who could receive them, and once AFN operations transferred to continental Europe (shortly after
D-Day) AFN was able to broadcast with little restriction with programs available to civilian audiences across most of Europe, (including Britain), after dark. As D-Day approached, the network joined with the BBC and the
Canadian Broadcasting Corporation to develop programs especially for the
Allied Expeditionary Forces. Mobile stations, complete with personnel, broadcasting equipment and a record library, were deployed to broadcast music and news to troops in the field. The mobile stations reported on front-line activities and fed the news reports back to studio locations in London. Although the network's administrative headquarters remained in London, its operational headquarters soon moved to Paris. As
Allied forces continued to push
German troops back into their homeland, AFN moved east as well. The liberation of most of Western Europe saw AFN stations serving the forces liberating
Biarritz,
Cannes,
Le Havre,
Marseille,
Nice,
Paris and
Reims. During the period between 1943 and 1949 the AFN also broadcast programs developed through a collaboration of the
Department of State's
Office of the Coordinator of Inter-American Affairs and
CBS's
La Cadena de las Americas network while supporting America's
cultural diplomacy initiatives. Included among the programs was
Viva America which showcased leading musical talents from both North and South America and was transmitted for the benefit of armed forces throughout Europe and to South America over CBS's short wave network "La Cadena de Las Americas".
Post-war contraction and expansion broadcasting the Armed Forces Radio Service's
Concert Hall radio show (1947) On 10 July 1945, the first AFN station in occupied
Germany started broadcasting:
AFN Munich. Its first broadcast was however incorrect as it began with the sentence "Good morning! This is AFN Munich, the voice of the 7th Army!". General
George S. Patton, commander of the 3rd Army, was furious with the opening as his army had taken control over
Munich the previous night, and demanded that the responsible person be
court-martialed. Soon after AFN Munich signed on the air in the southern part of occupied Germany, in northern Germany, AFN Bremen begin broadcasting a few weeks later with its first radio broadcast occurring on Saturday, 28 July 1945. (In 1949, the station moved from the city of Bremen north to the port city of Bremerhaven and became
AFN Bremerhaven.) On 31 December 1945, AFN London signed off the air, and in 1948 AFN closed all its stations in France. This started the cycle of AFN stations where they would be built up during wartime, then torn down or moved after the war was over. Of the 300 stations in operation worldwide in 1945, only 60 remained in 1949.
Post-War Europe A large number of AFN stations continued broadcasting from American bases in Europe (particularly
Germany) after
World War II. (Eight remain on the air today. See article on
German Wikipedia.) During the
Berlin Blockade of 1948–1949, planes headed for
Tempelhof in West
Berlin tuned their radios to AFN-Berlin because the station's transmission tower was in the glide path to the airfield and was not jammed by the
Soviets. During the 1950s and 1960s, AFN had large civilian audiences in Europe, as European radio stations rarely played American music. In
Communist countries, all radio stations were state-operated, and never played American music. Despite the language barrier, the people in those countries saw AFN as an alternative connection to the West. Also, unlike stations such as
Radio Free Europe, which broadcast in Eastern European languages, AFN was not
jammed by the Soviets. Especially popular was
Music in the Air, which aired on the full European network at 19:00 CET. The host was
AFN Frankfurt (civilian) manager John Vrotsos, who had an especially warm baritone voice. He began each program by saying (after an introductory piano phrase from the program's theme music) "Listen ... [pause for more piano] ... there's music in the air". The theme was "Music Everywhere" in an arrangement by
Victor Young. Later in the 1950s,
Leroy Anderson's
Belle of the ball was used. The program was popular throughout Northern Europe, especially in the liberated countries such as the
Netherlands,
Belgium,
France (the northern part),
Luxembourg and, to a lesser extent,
Denmark. Many Dutch households switched to the program, also because of their positive experiences with the American liberators. Also featured were live performances of classical music and jazz by
Samuel Hans Adler's
Seventh Army Symphony Orchestra in support of America's
cultural diplomacy initiatives in the post war period. In France, about a dozen AFN stations operated, with AFN Orléans as the studio control station. The network broadcast music, shows, and news relayed from AFN Frankfurt, locally produced shows, and other features aimed at the American soldiers and their families stationed in France. In particular, a whole team of reporters and technicians was sent to cover
the 24-hour auto race at Le Mans, at a time when Ford was doing its best to beat the Ferraris, and finally succeeded. AFN France broadcast with 50 watt
FM transmitters made by French manufacturer TRT, type OZ 305. The network employed a technical director, a program director, several military American broadcast professionals, and some French studio operators, record librarians, secretaries and maintenance technicians. The Frankfurt network programming was received, then re-fed from AFN Orléans studios to another studio-equipped affiliate, AFN Poitiers and its repeater transmitters via modulation lines rented from the French postal service. AFN Poitiers, based at Aboville Caserne, Poitiers, France, home of an Army logistical command and a major Communication Zone Signal Corps agency, served Army depots and installations in Southwestern France with locally originated programs and network feeds from AFN Orléans via Frankfurt, Germany. It was the only other studio station affiliate of AFN Orléans because of the large American military presence and its resident Department of Defense dorm school for children of American military and civilian families assigned to Poitiers, and the American installations located throughout Southwestern France. Children living in outlying American military installations and communities commuted to Poitiers once a week for daily classes and departed for home by bus and train. AFN France was dismantled in 1967, when U.S. forces left France due to the French government's decision of President (General)
Charles de Gaulle to withdraw its forces from
NATO's military command. The French employees were dismissed but were granted a severance pay (in
French francs and taxable) of one month per year of service, paid by the U.S. Army to the French government, in dollars (all the French employees were managed by a specially created service: le Bureau d'Aide aux Armées Alliées or AAA).
Korean War When war broke out in
Korea, Army broadcasters set up in
Seoul in the Banto Hotel (the old American Embassy Hotel). When the Chinese entered Seoul in December 1950, the crew moved to a mobile unit that was just completed and retreated to
Daegu. Due to the large number of American troops in Korea, a number of stations were started. Mobile units followed combat units to provide news and entertainment on the radio. By the time the 1953 armistice was signed, these mobile units became buildings with transmitters, and a network, American Forces Korea Network, was born. Canadian and American television personality
Jim Perry began his broadcasting career fresh out of high school with the Armed Forces Korea Network, under his birthname of Jim Dooley, spending one year in Korea before attending the
University of Pennsylvania to further his education.
Pahlavi Iran An AFRTS radio station became operational in
Tehran,
Iran, in 1959. known as AFTV. It broadcast a radio service on 1555 kHz and a television service on Channel 7 in Tehran and the surrounding area from its studios in the city. Its listeners (and viewers) were American military personnel stationed in Iran as part of
ARMISH (the
U.S. Army mission) and
Military Assistance Advisory Group (MAAG) programs. AFTV was also popular with Iranian viewers, particularly children. As the TV service only had a power of 1000 watts, it was only on air for a few hours each day, whereas the radio service operated for around 18 hours a day. In deference to Iranian sensitivities, AFRTS avoided carrying programming that might be construed as offensive on political or religious grounds, instead carrying cowboy or detective movies. Following the nationalization of the privately owned
Television Iran network in 1969, AFTV was the only television service not in the Iranian government's hands. However, in 1976, it was decided by the Iranian government that AFRTS should close down its radio and TV services, which it did on 25 October of that year, the day before the
Shah's 57th birthday. Radio 1555 closed with presenter Air Force Staff Sergeant Barry Cantor playing
Roger Whittaker's "
Durham Town (The Leavin')". This was followed by a closing announcement by Chief Master Sergeant and Station Manager Bob Woodruff, ending with the
U.S. national anthem: Ladies and Gentlemen, I'm Chief Master Sergeant Bob Woodruff Station Manager of the American Forces Radio and Television Service in Tehran. After 22 years of radio broadcasting and 17 years of telecasting in Tehran, AFRTS Radio 1555 and TV Channel 7 cease all operations in this country at this time. I bid you all goodbye and thank you for letting us serve you. And now the national anthem of the United States of America." The following day, AFRTS radio and television services in Iran were replaced by those operated by the state broadcaster
National Iranian Radio and Television (NIRT), which were similar in content, appealing to the 60 000 U.S. Army and civilian personnel then stationed in Iran, as well as the wider population of foreign nationals resident in the country.
South Vietnam As the U.S. military presence in
South Vietnam increased, AFRTS opened radio and later television stations there. AFRTS stations in Vietnam were initially known by the name "AFRS" (Armed Forces Radio Saigon), but as the number of stations quickly expanded throughout South Vietnam became known as "AFVN" (American Forces Vietnam Network) Beginning in 1971, AFVN began to close some stations in Vietnam. The last station to close was the key station in Saigon in 1973. Broadcasting continued under civilian leadership on FM only and using the name American Radio Service (ARS). The civilian engineers were provided by Pacific Architects and Engineers (PAE). ARS stayed on the air until the
fall of Saigon in April 1975. It was to play
Bing Crosby's version of
Irving Berlin's "
White Christmas" as a signal for Americans that the
final evacuation of Saigon had begun. The Crosby version of the record could not be found so
Tennessee Ernie Ford's record from 1968 was played.
Thailand In
Thailand, the Department of Defense began the planning for the Armed Forces Thailand Network in 1964 with Project Lamplighter and Project Limelight. By late 1966, implementation of the network began by the U.S. Air Force with stations on the air at
Korat,
U-Tapao,
Ubon,
Udorn,
Takhli and
Nahkon Phanom. In addition, there were more than 20 satellite stations that rebroadcast one or more of the primary stations, and that included one or more clandestine locations in
Laos. In April 1970, a battle-damaged
RF-4C Phantom II #65-0863 returning to Udorn from a reconnaissance mission in northwest Laos, crashed into the AFTN station, killing 9 Air Force broadcasters. Pilot Leaphart and Navigator Bernholz ejected from their battle damaged plane when it went out of control on final approach. Both crewmen were injured but survived. The incident was the single worst catastrophe in the history of military broadcasting killing: TSGT Jack A Hawley, Wakeman, OH; SSGT James A. Howard, Denver, CO; A1C Andrew C. McCartney, Lakewood, OH; SSGT Alfred N. Potter, Forest Grove, OR; SGT John Charles Rose, Bloomfield, NJ; TSGT Frank D. Ryan Jr., Mercer Island, WA; SSGT Edward W. Strain, Myrtle Beach, SC; TSGT Roy Walker, Albuquerque, NM and A1C Thomas L. Waterman, Roanoke, VA. AFTN became the American Forces Thailand Network in the summer of 1969, and continued operations until the spring of 1976 when the remaining U.S. troops in Thailand were withdrawn at the request of the Thai government. More than 600 broadcasters from the Air Force, Navy and Army had served during the ten years that AFTN operated.
Taiwan Before the United States and the
People's Republic of China established diplomatic relations in 1979, the AFN branch in
Taiwan was Armed Forces Network Taiwan (AFNT), which had a main station in
Yangmingshan American Military Housing,
Taipei. After the
U.S. armed forces withdrew all its troops stationed in Taiwan (including the
United States Taiwan Defense Command) as
Washington, D.C., recognizes
Beijing and broke ties with Taipei, the station was reorganized under the name of
International Community Radio Taipei (ICRT) by the
American Chamber of Commerce in Taipei and the
ROC government. Today, ICRT is the only
English-language radio service in Taiwan.
Caribbean Then still known as the American Forces (or Armed Forces) Radio and Television Service, military bases and facilities throughout Puerto Rico received original radio programming from Army studios at Ft. Brooke in San Juan, Air Force studios at Ramey Air Force Base, and radio and television originating from Navy studios at Roosevelt Roads, in addition to local playback of stateside entertainment radio and television shows. This broadcast service was known as AFCN, the American Forces Caribbean Network in the 1970s (later as the Armed Forces Caribbean Network) served military bases and facilities throughout Puerto Rico from transmitters in San Juan (Fort Brooke, Fort Buchanan), Roosevelt Roads Naval Station, and Ramey Air Force Base. Each of these bases also had their own television transmitters or cable systems that played back stateside TV programming delivered to each location in weekly "packages" of 16mm film, kinescope recordings, video tape, and satellite news programming feeds. AFCN Roosevelt Roads also produced live radio programming featuring Navy Journalist/Broadcaster disc jockeys in a Top 40 hits format, combined with programming from AFRTS Hollywood-sourced stateside shows such as American Top 40. Programming broadcast over AFCN broadcast radio and television transmitter antennas also reached some local civilian markets across Puerto Rico, such as San Juan.
Central America Radio, and later television, to U.S. troops stationed in the
Panama Canal Zone was provided initially by Armed Forces Radio (AFN) at
Albrook Field and later as the
Caribbean Forces Network at
Fort Clayton with translators on the Atlantic side of the Canal Zone. In the early 1960s with reorganization of the command located in the Canal Zone, CFN became the Southern Command Network (SCN). SCN also broadcast to U.S. troops stationed in
Honduras starting in 1987. SCN discontinued broadcasting on 1 July 1999 just before the 31 December turnover of the Canal Zone to the
Republic of Panama when U.S. troops were removed from that country under the
Torrijos-Carter Treaties. AFN
Honduras, which began in 1987 as SCN Honduras, now broadcasts from
Soto Cano Air Base on 106.3 FM, and serves more than 600 American service members stationed at the installation, as well as numerous civilian employees and contractors. The station's primary mission is radio, originating programming including two daily live shows following the "Eagle" format. Personnel also occasionally produce video news packages. As of 15 January 2013, AFN Honduras is one of 18 stations under the operational control of AFN Europe.
Shortwave radio With the advent of
satellite broadcasting, AFRTS has shifted its emphasis away from
shortwave. Currently, the U.S. Navy provides the only shortwave
single sideband shortwave AFN radio broadcasts via relay sites around the world to provide service to ships, including
Diego Garcia,
Guam,
Naval Air Station Sigonella in Italy,
Puerto Rico,
Hawaii and others. ==Organization==