Arab World The IRD had two major Arabic projects, a radio station and a news agency. The
Near Eastern Arabic Broadcasting Station or
Sharq al Adna broadcast from a powerful transmitter in
Cyprus. It had a staff of 150, most of whom were
Palestinian. It was the cause of some embarrassment to
MI6 due to generating a profit. The
Arab News Agency was originally based in
Cairo. In August 1956 twenty people, including four British citizens were arrested. Two British Embassy staff were expelled as well as three journalists from the
Evening Standard, and one from the
Daily Mail. At the subsequent trial James Swinburn, the ANA secretary, confessed to the charges and was sentenced to five years in prison. An Egyptian army officer was sentenced to death and his son to life in prison. Several other Egyptians were given long sentences. After the
Suez War the ANA transferred its HQ to
Beirut, where it set up a secret arrangement with
Reuters whereby it paid £28,000 a year to be sole distributor of Reuters’ reports.
Italy In 1948, fearing a victory of the
Italian Communist Party in the
general election, the IRD instructed the
Embassy of the United Kingdom in Rome to disseminate anti-communist propaganda. Ambassador
Victor Mallet chaired a small
ad hoc committee to circulate IRD propaganda material to anti-communist journalists and
Italian Socialist Party and
Christian Democracy politicians.
Indonesia Following the
abortive Indonesian Communist coup attempt of 1965 and the subsequent
mass killings, the IRD's South East Asia Monitoring Unit in Singapore assisted the
Indonesian Army's destruction of the
Indonesian Communist Party (PKI) by circulating anti-PKI propaganda through several radio channels including the
British Broadcasting Corporation,
Radio Malaysia,
Radio Australia, and the
Voice of America, and through newspapers like
The Straits Times. The same anti-PKI message was repeated by an anti-Sukarno radio station called Radio Free Indonesia and the IRD's own newsletter. Recurrent themes emphasised by the IRD included the alleged brutality of PKI members in murdering the Indonesian generals and their families,
Chinese intervention in the Communist attempt to overthrow the government, and the PKI subverting Indonesian on behalf of foreign powers. The IRD's propaganda efforts were aided by the United States, Australian and
Malaysian governments which had an interest in supporting the Army's anti-communist mass murder and opposing
President Sukarno. The IRD's information efforts helped corroborate the Indonesia Army's propaganda efforts against the PKI. In addition, the
Harold Wilson Labour Government and its Australian counterpart gave the Indonesian Army leadership an assurance that British and Commonwealth forces would not step up the
Indonesia-Malaysia Confrontation.
British trade unions was home to several academics working for the IRD, including R.N. Carew Hunt (1890–1959), a wartime
SIS staff member, whose overzealous publication of anti-communist propaganda attracted the attention of investigative journalists. The following investigation led to the discovery of the IRD's existence. In 1969
Home Secretary James Callaghan requested actions that would hinder the careers of two "politically motivated"
trade unionists,
Jack Jones of the
Transport and General Workers Union and
Hugh Scanlon of the
Amalgamated Engineering Union. This issue was raised in the cabinet and further discussed with
Secretary of State for Employment Barbara Castle. A plan for detrimental leaks to the media was placed in the IRD files, and the head of the IRD prepared a briefing paper. Information about how this was effected has not been released under the
thirty-year rule under a section of the
Public Records Act permitting national security exemptions.
Stokeley Carmichael In 2022 declassified documents showed that the IRD attacked the U.S.
Black Power movement with covert disinformation in the 1960s. Civil rights leader
Stokeley Carmichael, who had fled to Africa, was targeted; he was claimed to be a foreigner in Africa who was contemptuous of Africans, rather than a Communist stooge. The IRD created a fake west African organisation called ''The Black Power – Africa's Heritage Group'', which criticised Carmichael as an "unbidden prophet from America" who had abandoned the U.S. Black Power cause, with no place in Africa, who was "weaving a bloody trail of chaos in the name of Pan-Africanism", controlled by
Kwame Nkrumah, the independence leader and former president of Ghana deposed by a coup in 1966.
Reuters In 1969
Reuters agreed to open a reporting service in the Middle East as part of an IRD plan to influence the international media. To protect the reputation of Reuters, which might have been damaged if the funding from the British government became known, the BBC paid Reuters "enhanced subscriptions" for access to its news service and was in turn compensated by the British government for the extra expense. The BBC paid Reuters £350,000 over four years.
Chile The IRD conducted a propaganda programme to prevent
Salvador Allende from being elected president of Chile in the
1964 election. Allende's nationalisation policy threatened British and US interests since Chile's copper mines were largely owned by US companies. In the lead up to the election, the IRD was told by a British Cabinet Office unit called the "Counter-subversion Committee's Working Group on Latin America" that "it will be important to prevent significant gains by the extreme left". The IRD supported Allende's opponent
Eduardo Frei Montalva in the lead up to the election by distributing material to its reliable contacts that was critical of Allende, and favourable to Frei. The distribution of propaganda material by the IRD diminished after Allende was
elected president in 1970, but increased again after the
1973 coup. The material was passed "to the Chilean Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Government information organisations" and the dictatorship's "military intelligence" services. The IRD helped Pinochet's government to develop a counter-insurgency strategy in order to stabilise it against domestic opposition. The counter insurgency techniques provided to Chile by the IRD were developed by Britain during its
colonial interventions in Southeast Asia. The Chilean authorities were told not to reveal that the information came from the British government. ==Controversies==