Harsh Condemnations of Michael Pack at Hearing on USAGM and Voice of America

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USAGM Watch Commentary

House Foreign Affairs Committee Chair Eliot Engel, a New York Democrat who has lost a recent primary election but is still in charge of the committee until January 2021, held an oversight hearing Thursday examining the U.S. Agency for Global Media (USAGM), the parent agency of Voice of America (VOA) and other U.S.-funded media networks. At the hearing, members of Congress from both parties harshly condemned USAGM CEO Michael Pack who has ignored a subpoena to appear and answer lawmakers’ questions. A Republican committee member, Scott Perry (R-PA), defended Pack’s management of the agency and called the hearing a “pretty substantial hit job.”

Former VOA director Amanda Bennett, former Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty (RFE/RL) president Jamie Fly, chair of the board of directors of the Open Technology (OTF) Fund Karen Kornbluh, and former USAGM executive Grant Turner who was placed on administrative leave after Pack revoked his security clearance, testified at the hearing. Committee members dismissed Pack’s claims of serious security breaches at the agency under executives appointed during the Obama administration, including former USAGM CEO John F. Lansing. Some committee members have called for Pack’s resignation.

Former VOA senior White House correspondent Dan Robinson, who is a frequent contributor to USAGM Watch, posted a comment on the Voice of America Alumni Page criticizing the House Foreign Affairs Committee hearing for failing to examine all evidence and information about the agency.

As an initial comment on the House Foreign Affairs Committee hearing on USAGM there was enough BS flying around in the hearing room to fill several oil tankers. Congressman Engel (D-NY) started things off by claiming that VOA leaders were “immediately removed” by Pack (not true). Lawmakers failed to dig into key facts surrounding the OTF issue, such as OIG report(s) detailing a RFA/OTF rogue operation with taxpayer money, and lax oversight. Brad Sherman (D-CA) repeatedly mis-pronounced Pack’s name and downplayed the incident in the Urdu Service involving a pro-Biden video. Various ex entity officials downplayed scandals. One claimed that Pack had specifically accused VOA journalists of being “spies”. Much of the hearing amounted to a replay of major media attacks on Pack since he arrived. Amanda Bennett said: “VOA and the other agencies…have been traditionally been completely independent of such scrutiny and actions….” implying that VOA and other entities have somehow always been immune from Executive branch and other srutiny. It was left to Scott Perry (R-PA 10th) to call the hearing a “pretty substantial hit job” a “road show” and a “circus” Since Congressman Perry’s statement will no doubt be buried in a pile of anti-Pack media coverage of the hearing, I’ll post it here. BTW — as an example of how little most major media really care about the agency, none of them cut away from programming Thursday to report on it, even to note Pack’s absence…

Committee members participating in the hearing criticized Pack’s decision not to renew work visas for some VOA foreign reporters. One of the journalists whose visa was not renewed by Pack had worked previously for Russian state broadcaster RT. Another reporter previously working for VOA whose contract was not renewed already by the former management, had produced earlier anti-American propaganda videos in Russian with anti-semitic and conspiracy theories content. The former management team later replaced by Pack allowed him to produce news reports for VOA for several months after being warned by Belarusian journalists about his previous anti-U.S. propaganda work. RFE/RL management under former president Jamie Fly stopped using reports by the controversial VOA Russian journalist while VOA under John Lansing and Amanda Bennett continued to employ him.

A key senior strategic advisor to former Obama administration CEO John Lansing, who is now in charge of National Public Radio (NPR) following his resignation from the agency toward the end of 2019, was arrested and convicted in a federal court of stealing money from USAGM while working for Lansing. Lansing indicated that he had absolutely no idea of his top aide’s criminal activity until it was brought to his attention. According to USAGM employees, before his firing for fraud, Dr. Haroon Ullah, who was recruited by Lansing, later helped to bring to the agency a few of his former work associates as either federal employees or contractors.

The former Lansing-Bennett-Grant management team fired three VOA Mandarin Service journalists who were U.S. citizens and disciplined others after Bennett accused them of not following her orders and ignoring journalistic standards in interviewing a Chinese whistleblower. The journalists dispute her accusations. She ordered them to shorten the 2017 live interview with Guo Wengui following threats from the Chinese government but claimed that her decision was not influenced by Chinese officials.

Former Broadcasting Board of Governors (BBG) chair (2013-2017), Hollywood executive Jeff Shell who was appointed by President Obama, and some other former Democratic BBG board members were doing major corporate business in China and in some cases in Russia while also overseeing Voice of America programs to Russia and China, as well as Radio Free Asia (RFA) broadcasts to China. RFA was overseen by the Broadcasting Board of Governors as the U.S. Agency for Global Media was called before 2018. Both Lansing and Bennett were appointed while Jeff Shell was BBG chair. Bennett’s husband, former Washington Post publisher Donald Graham, was reported to have corporate business interests in China.

The lawmakers and some of the witnesses severely criticized Pack for suggesting that journalists could be spies for countries hostile toward the United States. They also accused Pack of trying to politicize the Voice of America and other USAGM entities and of undermining their mission in support of freedom and democracy.

Under officials appointed during the Obama administration, some Voice of America editors and reporters produced anti-Trump electoral partisan videos and social media posts in violation of the VOA Charter. One partisan pro-Joe Biden video was recently posted by the VOA Urdu Service.

WATCH HERE ON CSPAN

Listen to “Michael Pack reveals stunning foreign influence in federal media agencies” on Spreaker.

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