On 26 February 1941, President Roosevelt directed that $150,000 be allocated for creation of the
Foreign Broadcast Monitoring Service (
FBMS) under the authority of the
Federal Communications Commission. The mandate of the FBMS was to record, translate, transcribe and analyze
shortwave propaganda radio programs that were being beamed at the United States by the
Axis powers. Its first monitoring station was established in October 1941 in
Portland, Oregon.
Foreign Broadcast Intelligence Service The year following the
attack on Pearl Harbor in December 1941, the system gained importance and changed its name to the
Foreign Broadcast Intelligence Service partly to make it sound more like a war agency. the service was transferred to the
Department of the Army. Like many other wartime organizations, the service was threatened with disbandment. The possibility of its disbandment was roundly criticized in many different quarters, which helped ensure its survival. When President
Harry S. Truman created the
Central Intelligence Group under the direction of a
Director of Central Intelligence by presidential directive on January 22, 1946, the FBIS became part of that group. In 1946, the service was renamed the Foreign Broadcast Information Service (FBIS), and became a part of the
Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) as that organization was formed following the
National Security Act of 1947. Its original mission revolved around radio and press agency monitoring, built on what was already becoming an “almost mature, trained and disciplined” organization from the war experience. In response to the
Cuban Missile Crisis and
START Treaty, FBIS was tasked with monitoring for clandestine and encoded messages from all nations and coordinating broadcast media contact points who could instantly broadcast urgent messages on "All Channels" and "All Calls". In 1967, the Service's mission was expanded to cover foreign mass media transmitted by radio, television, and print. In 2007,
Readex announced its plans to create a digital edition entitled Foreign Broadcast Information Service (FBIS) Daily Reports, 1941–1996. , this collection is available online via a paid subscription to Readex, as are Daily Report Annexes for 1974–1996. The FBIS became the Open Source Center (OSC) within the CIA in 2005; the CIA discontinued public access to OSC in 2013. ==Services==