It is not generally known that Radio Free Europe (RFE) broadcast to Albania, as the "Voice of Free Albania," from June 1, 1951, to September 30, 1953. If at all mentioned in the histories of RFE, Albanian broadcasts are usually mentioned in the footnotes. Below is a brief look into RFE and Albania in the 1950s.
At the regular monthly meeting of the National Committee for a Free Europe (NCFE) board of directors on July 20, 1950, it was resolved to increase the 1950-1951 budget of the National Councils Division by $60,000 for "support of the National Committee for Free Albania."
In the National Intelligence Estimate (NIE 42), dated November 20, 1951, on the situation in Albania, it was written, "Among the Albanian émigré resistance movements the Committee for a Free Albania, an affiliate of the National Committee for a Free Europe, with operational headquarters in Rome is perhaps the most influential."
In announcing the inaugural broadcast on June 1, 1951, RFE's press release said, "It will warn Albanians of new 'security measures planned by the Kremlin's MVD police and further advise: 'Be cautious, my friends, be patient.'"
1n 1952, the National Committee for Free Albania (NCFA) complained to CIA that the RFE desk in New York did not make full use of the material published in the two NCFA publications. To overcome this, it was proposed to have one member of NCFA do a 15-minute summary once a week, which Radio Free Europe would broadcast. This was a condensation of the material appearing in the two NCFA publications with particular emphasis on the news that would be of interest to the listener. NCFA believed that Bill Griffith, RFE political adviser in Munich, was probably responsible for many of the mistakes RFE made in airing programs taped by exile Albanians outside NCFA. It was agreed between NCFA and RFE to have the 15-minute recordings made in Rome and sent to Germany for broadcasting.
By 1953, Radio Free Europe had 20 short-wave transmitters and one medium-wave transmitter. RFE used three transmitters to broadcast to Romania (3 hours per day), Bulgaria (3 hours), and Albania (1 1/2 hours).
Crusade for Freedom fundraising campaigns in the United States for Radio Free Europe included Albanian broadcasts. For example, the 1952 Crusade opened on November 11, 1952, with a national goal of $4,000,000 and signatures of millions of Americans on "Freedom-Grams" in the shape of a normal telegram that would be sent over the Iron Curtain. On the backside of the "Freedom-Gram," this message was translated into Albanian, Czech, Slovak, Polish, Hungarian, Romanian, and Bulgarian:
Do you listen to Radio Free Europe? I hope you do, for I am one of the millions of American citizens who has voluntarily contributed to building these stations, which bring Truth to you who are deprived of it.
In America, millions voluntarily pray for an understanding between our peoples. Please add your prayers to ours. Surely our common faith in God is the place where hope for freedom begins.
Occupation
Name
Address
Note to Contributors: Replies to this Freedom-Gram may be
received in a foreign language. If you should be unable to
translate them, free translations may be obtained by forwarding the
letters to Crusade for Freedom c/o your local Postmaster
Eventually, six million Americans signed the "Freedom-Grams," which were then sent to West Germany for inclusion in the balloons provided by the Free European Press.
RFE ceased broadcasting on September 30, 1953, primarily because it was not cost-effective broadcasting to a country that, according to a UNESCO report, only had an estimated nine thousand radios in a population of one-and-a-half million.
In 1957, CIA's Chief of the Psychological and Paramilitary Staff requested consideration of Radio Free Europe resuming broadcasting to Albania. The idea was dismissed International Organizations Division, which was responsible for RFE, because:
a. Budget limitations on RFE in this fiscal year and ceilings on ensuing fiscal years, coupled with increasing administrative costs the most important of which relate to anticipated wages adjustment, are expected materially to reduce RFE’s present operational funds.
b. The acquisition of competent Albanian exile desk employees and Albanian-speaking American supervisors, while not insoluble, is a difficult problem.
c. The proposal envisions that RFE would pick up the straight anti-Communist line of the present broadcasts, leaving to the present broadcasts the treatment of "national communism." This would place RFE in a difficult position vis a via its exile employees who would question the difference in program lines to Albania as compared to the present five target countries
For information about the CIA clandestine radio station also called "Radio Free Albania" see Chapter 5 in:







