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Wikipedia

American Forces Network

The American Forces Network (AFN) is a government television and radio broadcast service the U.S. military provides to those stationed or assigned overseas. Headquartered at Fort George G. Meade, Maryland, AFN's broadcast operations, which include global radio and television satellite feeds, emanate from the AFN Broadcast Center/Defense Media Center in Riverside, California.[1] AFN was founded on 26 May 1942, in London, as the Armed Forces Radio Service (AFRS).[2]

American Forces Network
Founded26 May 1942; 81 years ago (1942-05-26) (as the Armed Forces Radio Service)
FounderUnited States Armed Forces
HeadquartersFort George G. Meade, Maryland, United States
ProductsTelevision, Radio
OwnerIndependent (1942–1980)
United States Armed Forces (1942–present)
ParentIndependent (1942–1980)
Office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Public Affairs (1980–present)
American Forces Radio and Television Service (1980–present)
Websitemyafn.dodmedia.osd.mil

History edit

The American Forces Network can trace its origins to 26 May 1942, when the War Department established the Armed Forces Radio Service (AFRS).[3] 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).[3]

All the Armed Forces broadcasting affiliates worldwide merged under the AFN banner on 1 January 1998. On 21 November 2000, the American Forces Information Service directed a change of the AFRTS organizational title from Armed Forces Radio and Television Service back to American Forces Radio and Television Service. A timeline of the history of AFN is available online.[4]

Origins edit

KODK began broadcasting from the U.S. Army base Greeley at Kodiak, Alaska, before the inception of the AFRS,. Fort Greeley being first in Kodiak (Fort Abercrombie today)

Fort Greeley, Delta Junction was built to defend and was an integral part of the Kodiak Naval Air Station, sometimes called Naval Operating Base. Construction of both was under way in 1940. The naval station and AFRS radio remained in operation, but Fort Greely closed at the end of World War II. Years later, the name Fort Greely was resurrected for the Big Delta (near Delta Junction) Army base. The small town of Kodiak, located six miles away, had no radio station, while Anchorage and Fairbanks, where Army and Army Air Force bases soon would be established, had civilian radio stations. Thus, KODK had a primary role to bring radio to the armed forces and civilians in the Kodiak area. The sign-off at KODK was the memorable "Goodnight, Sweetheart" set to a stirring melody from Liszt's Les Preludes. The station lived on to bring the first television to Kodiak.

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 edit

 
Bob Hope welcomes Jane Russell to Command Performance (1944).
 
Frank Sinatra 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.
 
Humphrey Bogart and Lauren Bacall being interviewed by the Armed Forces Radio Service

The U.S. Army 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, a BBC News and sports broadcast. That day, Corporal 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 AFN 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 the CBS 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".[5][6][7][8]

Post-war contraction and expansion edit

 
Lionel Barrymore 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, the 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.[9][10]

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 edit

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.[11] 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.[12][13]

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).[citation needed]

Korean War edit

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 edit

An AFRTS radio station became operational in Tehran, Iran in 1959.[14] This was followed by a television station in 1960,[15] known as AFTV.[16] 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.[17]

Its listeners (and viewers) were American military personnel stationed in Iran as part of ARMISH (the US Army mission) and Military Assistance Advisory Group (MAAG) programs.[14] AFTV was also popular with Iranian viewers, particularly children.[18]

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.[19] 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.[20]

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.[21] 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.[22]

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."[23][24][25]

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.[26]

South Vietnam edit

As the U.S. military presence in South Vietnam increased, AFRTS opened radio and later television stations there.[27]

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)[27] and had several stations, including Qui Nhơn, Nha Trang, Pleiku, Da Nang and Huế, the latter being overrun by the People's Army of Vietnam during the Battle of Hue in January/February 1968 and replaced by a station in Quảng Trị. AFVN's headquarters station was located in Saigon.

In Vietnam, AFVN had a number of war-related casualties. After a fierce fire fight that killed two soldiers and a civilian contractor, the remaining AFVN station staff at Huế was captured and spent five years as prisoners of war. At the height of American involvement in the war, Armed Forces Vietnam Network served more than 500,000 fighting men and women at one time. AFVN developed a program along the lines of "GI Jive" from World War II. A number of local disc jockeys helped make hourlong music programs for broadcast. Perhaps the best-known program became the morning "Dawn Buster" program, (the brainchild of Chief Petty Officer Bryant Arbuckle in 1962) thanks to the popularity of the sign-on slogan "Gooooood Morning, Vietnam" (which was initiated by Adrian Cronauer and later became the basis for the film Good Morning, Vietnam starring Robin Williams). Among the notable people who were AFVN disc jockeys were Don L. "Scotty" Brink, Lee Hansen, Les Coleman and Pat Sajak, Chris Noel and Denny Woytek. Harry Simons hosted the GO Show at both AFVN Saigon and Danang in 1968 and 1969. Simons along with broadcaster Mike Bates created and produced a 10-hour radio documentary (AFVN: The GI's Companion) as a tribute to AFVN and to honor all Vietnam Veterans. It aired and streamed on Veterans Day 2015 on WEBY Radio in Pensacola, Florida. The documentary is archived at Rock Radio Scrapbook: AFVN: The GI's Companion.[28]

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).[29] 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 edit

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.[30]

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 edit

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 edit

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 edit

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[31] just before the 31 December[32] 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 edit

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 edit

The American Forces Network (AFN) is the operational arm of the American Forces Radio and Television Service (AFRTS), an office of the Defense Media Activity (DMA). AFN falls under the operational control of the Office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Public Affairs (OASD-PA). Editorial control is by the Department of Defense, whereas the British Forces Broadcasting Service (BFBS), for example, is independent of the Ministry of Defence and the British armed forces.

AFN employs military broadcasters as well as Defense Department civilians and contractors. Service personnel hold broadcasting occupational specialties for their military branch.

Since 1997, all of AFN's military personnel receive primary training at the Defense Information School (DINFOS) at Fort George G. Meade in Maryland. Before 1997, DINFOS was located at Fort Benjamin Harrison in Indianapolis, Indiana. In 1997, Fort Benjamin Harrison was largely closed as a function of the 1991 Base Closure and Realignment Commission. Additional/Advanced training is also available at Fort George G. Meade.

In the 1960s, DINFOS was located at Fort Slocum, NY on a small island just off the harbor at New Rochelle. At its peak in 1965, the Army Chaplain school was also located there. In 1963 the campus operated in a "university" setting with a relaxed military environment. The Army ran the Information School although training was offered to members of all military branches. Radio types took a rather severe audition written by CBS for their network announcers. Those who survived the audition became "Broadcast Specialists" with a 703 MOS and went on to an AFRTS assignment.

Some of AFN's broadcasters have previous commercial broadcasting experience before enlisting in the military, but it is not a prerequisite for enlistment in the military as a broadcaster. During their training, the broadcasters are taught to use state-of-the-art audio and visual editing equipment similar to their civilian counterparts.

AFN management is located at DMA headquarters at Fort Meade. Day-to-day AFN broadcast operations are conducted at the AFN Broadcast Center/Defense Media Center in Riverside, California, from where all global radio and television satellite feeds emanate.

Television services edit

European operations edit

Until the early 1970s, U.S. military television service was provided in Western Europe by Air Force Television at Ramstein Air Base, Germany. In the early 1970s, AFN assumed this responsibility for the Armed Forces Radio and Television Service (AFRTS).

AFN Bremerhaven was the first AFN television station in Europe to broadcast its programming in color. The U.S. European Edition of Stars and Stripes (S&S) reported in its Thursday, 21 August 1975, edition that the AFN-Europe Commander, Lt. Col. Floyd A. McBride, announced that AFN's first color TV broadcast would begin in Bremerhaven on Monday 25 August 1975. As S&S reported, because Bremerhaven's TV operation was so small, only a "Class C" operation, and, at the time, served only one area with TV programming, it was easy to establish the color TV broadcast operation without extensive expense or expansion.[33]

That next year, S&S reported in its Wednesday, 23 June 1976, edition, that "the long-awaited switch to color by AFN-TV could come by the end of the year for viewers in most of West Germany. The only viewers enjoying color right now are those watching the pilot color TV station in Bremerhaven, which went on the air in…1975".[33]

Finally, on 28 October 1976, AFN television moved from AFTV's old black-and-white studios at Ramstein to the network's new color television studios in Frankfurt. In the 1980s the network added affiliates with studio capabilities in Würzburg, Germany, and Soesterberg, the Netherlands, expanding the network to 12 affiliate stations serving American military, DOD-employed civilians and their families estimated to be well-above 350,000 stationed in West Germany, the Netherlands, and Belgium. This was accomplished by a system of 112 microwave transmitters operated and maintained by the Army's 5th Signal Command. Embassies and other entities of the American government without access to AFN TV signals received a 30-plus hour package mailed weekly of AFN and U.S. programming. In April, 1984 AFN began broadcasting live news, information and entertainment programming received through an 11-meter satellite dish downlink at AFN network headquarters, in addition to primetime pre-recorded shows and movies received from the Armed Forces Radio-Television Service broadcast center in Hollywood. For outlying areas, broadcast feeds of live American sports events were frequently provided by European contractors.

AFN TV was available in West Berlin until 1994.[34] However, it was only available in the American Sector.[35]

In 2004, AFN Europe headquarters relocated to Coleman Barracks in Mannheim, Germany.

In 2014, AFN Europe headquarters relocated to Sembach Kaserne in Sembach, Germany.

Pacific operations edit

Over-the-air TV for U.S. Forces in the Pacific is currently provided by AFN-Korea, AFN-Japan and AFN-Kwajalein. All local operations merged under the AFN banner effective 1 January 1998.

South Korea edit

AFN-Korea, formerly American Forces Korea Network (AFKN), was the largest of AFN's Pacific TV operations, although there are also AM and FM operations from military bases around Korea. AFKN began TV operations on 15 September 1957, and consisted of an originating studio at Yongsan Garrison, Seoul, and six relay transmitters throughout the peninsula. AFKN's first live television newscast aired on 4 January 1959. Until December 2007, the channel was widely available to non-military audiences on cable television, but following complaints from U.S. companies trying to sell programs in South Korea, USFK requested that the Korean Broadcasting Commission direct the removal of Pacific Prime from the Korean cable lineups.[36] American Forces Network-Korea discontinued analog over-the-air TV broadcast 1 May 2012, due to request from the South Korean government because many local residents could receive current over-the-air U.S. network programming, resulting in decreased sales of U.S. programs to South Korean stations.[37]

Japan edit

AFN-Japan, formerly the Far East Network (FEN), had one full-power VHF terrestrial TV outlet – located on Okinawa atop the Rycom Plaza Housing area in the central part of the island, AFN-Okinawa's (U.S. channel 8) TV signal served Marines, Airmen, Sailors, Soldiers, and their families stationed on-island. TV viewers on military bases in the Tokyo and Kanto Plain area of Japan can view AFN via contractor-operated base cable TV services, or through AFN Direct-To-Home (DTH) dish services if they reside off-base.

AFN-Japan's radio services consist of AM and FM stereo operations at Yokota Air Base (810 AM & cable FM), MCAS Iwakuni (1575 AM), FLTACTS Sasebo (1575 AM), Okinawa (648 AM & 89.1 FM) and Misawa Air Base (1575 AM).

AFN-Okinawa ceased over-the-air analog TV operations along with all other Japanese TV stations on July 24, 2011.

Latin America edit

There used to be a television service in Panama (SCN) from 1956 to 1999. Broadcast on channel 8 in the Pacific zone and channel 10 in the Atlantic zone. In 1999, from the termination of local production (June 30) to the shutdown of the station and return of the control of the Panama Canal to the Panamanian state (December 31), the channel was relaying the main AFN service. After its closure, the Panamanian regulatory body aimed at bidding channel 8 and its relay station to local companies, but the bid was frozen in March 2000.[38][39][40]

In 2001, following failed attempts at creating a regional educational station,[41] the Panamanian government started setting a date for the fate of the former SCN frequencies, July 10.[42][43] Since no company successfully bid for those licenses, channels 7 and 9 in the capital zone were given for a bid, Tele 7 (now Oye) and TVMax, both starting in 2005.

Kwajalein Atoll edit

AFN-Kwajalein at the Reagan Missile Test Range on Kwajalein Atoll is the only civilian-run affiliate in AFN, broadcasting on U.S. channel 13 for military personnel and civilian contractor employees and their families. AFN-Kwajalein's signal is beamed by microwave to the nearby island of Roi-Namur and rebroadcast on channel 8.

With the availability of AFN's DTH service, terrestrial over-the-air TV broadcasts at all AFN outlets are slated for deactivation in the near future.

Gulf War edit

In January 1991, the network dispatched news teams and technicians to Kuwait and Saudi Arabia for Operations Desert Shield and Desert Storm. These broadcasters reported to families of soldiers deployed from Europe and staffed a number of U.S. radio stations making up the Armed Forces Desert Network. The first song on the air after the start of the ground offensive was "Rock the Casbah" by The Clash.

The network first signed on under the name "Desert Shield Network" in Al Jubayl on September 12, 1990, but operated 24-hours of programming since January 2, 1991. As of January 1991, the Desert Shield Network is staffed by more than 50 military broadcasters operating out of four vans in the cities of Riyadh, Dhahran, Al Jubayl, and King Khalid Military City, and reaches nearly 90% of the U.S. military personnel featuring a 50/50 mix of news and contemporary music with jingles produced by JAM Creative Productions during each break of song or news breaks. At the time, the network began producing three minutes of local news per day which later expanded in its lineup. The vans are mobile studios containing 21 relay transmitters carrying radio signals to troops on various FM frequencies depending on location. Right after the operation became known as "Desert Storm", it retained its "Desert Shield Network" name due to the staff expecting to continue operations for an unspecified period of time until the end.

Operation Iraqi Freedom edit

 
AFN Iraq on-air radio studio. Baghdad, Iraq (April 2004).

AFN-Iraq began broadcasting in December 2003 on the FM band shortly after the fall of Saddam. The first song on the air was "Freedom" by Paul McCartney. Within a short time, Freedom Radio was broadcasting on multiple FM channels from as far south as Basra to as far north as Mosul.

AFN-Iraq, Freedom Radio began as a joint effort between the Air Force, the Marines and the Army. The first unit to operate the station was the 222nd Broadcast Operations Detachment, an Army Reserve unit based in southern California. "Always There and on the Air" was the phrase that started it all, even though there were only eight hours of live radio to kick things off.

After an introduction from Lt. Gen. Ricardo Sanchez, the commander of Coalition Ground Forces in Iraq, Air Force Master Sergeant Erik Brazones was the first DJ on the air. When the 222nd BOD took the reins of the radio operations, the first two regular radio shows were Niki Cage in the Morning and Abbey in the Afternoon. AFN-Iraq signed off in 2011.

Operation Enduring Freedom edit

AFN Afghanistan operated out of a building on Bagram Air Base. Its radio frequency throughout Afghanistan was 94.1 and 97.1 in Manas and produced live local shows. Its first radio transmission was at 06 o'clock 30 min on Friday, 21 July 2006. Beyond radio, AFN Afghanistan also had television news. It produced a daily five-minute newscast called Freedom Watch Afghanistan, which also aired on the Pentagon Channel.

The station was typically staffed with Air Force broadcasters but also slots Army, Navy and Marine broadcasters as well. For support there were usually four-man teams of engineers to handle all transmission, decoder and satellite issues.

Operations in Western Europe edit

AFN in Germany and SEB (Southern European Broadcasting) in Italy provided broadcasting to U.S. troops in Western Europe throughout the Cold War. The U.S. defense drawdown began in earnest after the Gulf War, and affected AFN stations across Europe, as many stations were consolidated or deactivated with the closing of bases. In Europe, AFN is still on the air from Tuzla, Bosnia, and Taszár, Hungary, to inform and entertain U.S. forces.[citation needed]

AFN went on the air 29 May with service at the Tirana airport in Albania with satellite decoders and large-screen televisions placed in high traffic areas. At the same time, the AFN also advanced into the Yugoslav province of Kosovo along with NATO.

AFN viewers abroad witnessed live television coverage of the terrorist attacks on the United States on 11 September 2001.

During military operations in Afghanistan and Iraq AFN provided non-stop coverage of the campaigns. AFN broadcast personnel from Europe deployed with the troops to cover events. Today AFN has a staffed affiliate in Iraq, AFN-Baghdad (launched in 2003).

Wherever large numbers of U.S. troops are deployed, the AFN sets up operation, providing news and entertainment from home. Today AFN has several satellites and uses advanced digital compression technology to broadcast TV and radio to 177 countries and territories, as well as on board U.S. Navy vessels.

Media services edit

There have been ongoing plans for transitioning AFN TV to HDTV with an estimated completion timeframe between 2015 and 2017. So far, AFN has added one HD channel, with more being planned. However, the conversion to HD is an expensive project, so timelines and actual transition of channels is highly dependent on availability of funds. With the additional Department of Defense budget cuts looming, this project could easily be required to slip. However, AFN is continuing to research more efficient delivery methods in hopes of continuing along the planned path.

AFN's television service is broadcast in standard North American NTSC format of 525 lines. All programming delivered by satellite is PowerVu encrypted DVB. While programming is provided to AFN by major American TV networks and program syndicators at little to no cost, for copyright and licensing reasons it is intended solely for U.S. forces personnel, authorized Department of Defense civilian employees, State Department diplomatic personnel and their families overseas.

AFN-TV is available to authorized viewers by "Direct-To-Home" (DTH) service with set-top decoders purchased or leased through military exchanges (similar to a membership store), licensed/contracted commercial cable operators, purchased used from other military members (the cheapest option) or terrestrial signal. The advent of DTH service coincides with the phasing-out of AFN terrestrial TV broadcasts due to reclamation of frequencies by host nations.

AFN is considered a non-essential service, and programming ceases during government shutdowns. Sports programming to which the AFN has already purchased rights continues to be carried, as the skeleton crew operating AFN for essential programming does not save any money by blacking out the programs.

AFN programming edit

While the audience tunes into AFN to watch their favorite shows or listen to the latest stateside hits, entertainment is the "candy coating" used to attract the military viewer/listener. AFN's primary mission is to provide access for worldwide, regional and local command information (CI) spots, which air during commercial breaks in programming instead of commercial advertisements. These CI spots run the gamut from reminding service members to register to vote, promoting local command-sponsored recreation events and off-duty educational programs, providing health and wellness tips, and listing what's playing at local base movie theaters.

AFN also inserts public service announcements from the Ad Council. Some of the 35 overseas AFN affiliates have the capability to cover the "worldwide" CI spots placed by the AFN Broadcast Center in California with regional or locally produced CI spots (such as localized messages from senior leadership).

Many service members welcome this approach, while others find it troublesome, especially during the airing of the Super Bowl.

The network is allowed to broadcast commercial movie promotion trailers provided by the Army & Air Force Exchange Service (AAFES) and the Navy Motion Picture Service (NMPS) to promote the latest film releases in base theaters worldwide. Previously these were the only true "commercials" authorized for broadcast.

AFN Radio and TV schedules are available on the organization's website.[44]

Radio edit

AFN also offers a variety of radio programming over its various frequencies throughout the world. There is both local programming (with military disc jockeys) and satellite programming. Music programming spans classic rock, rhythm and blues, Jack FM and country music. Ryan Seacrest's American Top 40 (AFN The Blend), WoodSongs Old-Time Radio Hour (AFN Country), Casey Kasem's American Top 40 (AFN's Joe Radio) and the American Country Countdown with Kix Brooks (AFN Country) are broadcast weekly over AFN Radio. In addition to music, AFN broadcasts syndicated talk radio programs such as Car Talk (NPR AFN), John Tesh (Hot AC), The Bob and Sheri Show (AFN Joe Radio), Le Show (NPR AFN), Tech Nation (AFN The Voice), Kidd Kraddick in the Morning (AFN the Blend), Kim Komando (AFN The Voice), The Rush Limbaugh Show (AFN Power Talk), Delilah (AFN The Blend), The Motley Fool Radio Show (AFN The Voice), A Prairie Home Companion (NPR AFN), Doug Stephan (AFN The Voice),Titillating Sports with Rick Tittle, Sports Overnight America (AFN FANS), Mr Dad: Positive Parenting (AFN The Voice), and other programs from a variety of sources. Weekly religious programming is offered to AFN stations via closed-circuit.

On 5 December 2005, liberal/progressive Ed Schultz and conservative talk show host Sean Hannity were added to the radio programs provided by the AFN Broadcast Center to its affiliate stations. Liberal Alan Colmes rounds out the political talk lineup on The Voice channel.

On 24 April 2006, AFN Europe launched AFN The Eagle, a virtually 24-hour-a-day radio service format initially modeled after "Jack FM" but most recently a "Hot AC" format. This replaced ZFM, which had more of a contemporary hit radio flavor. When the Eagle was launched, AFN Europe took control of what local DJs could play.

Altogether, AFN produces ten general-use streams for AFN stations to use. Of these, six are music-based, two are sports-based and three general news/talk channels, including The Voice, which features live play-by-play of American sports (it's also the one heard on shortwave, if the shortwave radio has Single sideband installed). How these stations use these formats is up to them. These formats are:

  • AFN The Blend (mainstream hits and yesterday's favorites, programming from Westwood One and Premiere Networks. Formerly known as "AFN Hot AC")
  • AFN Country (country/western)
  • AFN Gravity (urban rhythmic)
  • AFN Legacy – Deep Classic Rock Gems
  • AFN's Joe Radio ('80s, '90s)
  • AFN Freedom Rock (Rock music)
  • AFN The Voice (News, talk and information)
  • AFN Clutch (sports programming from ESPN and SportsMap)
  • AFN Fans (sports programming from FOX Sports Radio and Sports Byline USA)
  • AFN PowerTalk (liberal and conservative talk programming)
  • NPR AFN (public radio programs from NPR and others)

Television edit

Like its radio counterpart, AFN TV tries to air programming from a variety of sources to replicate programming on a typical U.S. TV channel; sourcing from U.S. commercial networks (including PBS), and program syndicators at little to no cost since AFN does not air commercials and in that regard cannot profit from airing shows like stations in the United States can. In their place, AFN inserts public service announcements on various subjects; these can be civilian "agency spots" created by The Ad Council, nationally recognized religious and public health charities, AFN's own "command information" spots produced by the AFRTS Radio-Television Production Office (RTPO) or announcements by a regional/local AFN affiliate. The most common PSAs shown deal with sexual harassment, public health and safety, force protection/anti-terrorism, pride in service and messages to the troops.

Some people have found the AFN TV commercials to be repetitive, annoying, and condescending.[45][46]

AFN produces and broadcasts eight core satellite television channels in NTSC color. They are accessible to both military and foreign service personnel abroad. All eight feeds are accessible in core areas, including but not limited to European, Korean and Japanese posts. Much of the rest of the world is limited to a smaller but more widespread naval broadcast.

Channels edit

Unless specified, the first telecast of each channel targets the Japan/Korea region, then replayed several hours later for the Central European time zone.

  • AFN Prime. Formerly AFN Atlantic and AFN Pacific. The standard AFN feed airs current sitcoms, dramas, syndicated court shows, talk shows, game shows and reality shows popular in the United States, with a time delay from 24 hours to six months or more behind the United States airdates. In addition, popular U.S. soap operas such as General Hospital are aired by AFN on a one-week tape delay. This stream is divided into three feeds (AFN Prime Atlantic, AFN Prime Freedom (Middle East) and AFN Prime Pacific); the difference between the three is that they are time-shifted so that programs air at the same local time in each of the major regions served: Japan/Korea, Central Europe and Iraq. Many regional feeds (such as AFN-Europe and AFN-Korea) are based on AFN Prime and add local programming to it; thus, in a way, AFN Prime mimics the regular network TV concept. AFN Prime Freedom shuttered services in 2013 after the drawdown of troops from the Middle East
  • AFN Spectrum. AFN Spectrum started as more of a conservative culture-oriented channel with programming from cable networks and classic TV series. In a way, it mimicked the "superstation" concept from cablecasters TBS and WGN America. However, the Spectrum lineup currently contains more conventional programming, like American Idol and Ugly Betty, as some of the public television and classic fare that made up Spectrum is being reduced but remain the primary constant on the channel.
  • AFN News. AFN News is a rolling-news channel providing news from all major news outlets. Newscasts, such as the NBC Nightly News, Fox News, ABC World News Tonight and CBS Evening News, were all scheduled to air in the mornings so viewers could watch the headlines live, but now they air on a tape delay in the regular early evening slot, back to back.
  • AFN Family/AFN Pulse. AFN Family is a general entertainment channel providing programming for children ages 2 to 17. Although the name of the channel suggests programming appropriate for all family members at any time, the channel more closely resembles Freeform or Nickelodeon, with programming targeted at specific age groups during the course of the day. Programming during after school from 3 p.m. local time to 1 a.m. local time targets pre-schoolers but "ages" as older children become available to watch in the late morning and day. By 1 a.m. local time, programming is targeted at older teens. In September 2013, AFN launched a split in Family, which was branded AFN Pulse. About half of the day's programming remains aimed at the 2-to-13 age group. During primetime hours, the channel becomes AFN Pulse, and showcases programming primarily aimed at the older teen demographic, though it remains suitable for family viewing.
  • AFN Movie. AFN Movie is a channel showcasing movies as well as film-oriented programming.
  • AFN Sports. AFN Sports is a rolling-sports channel, providing sports news and events, including ESPN's SportsCenter and live and delayed broadcasts of the NFL, NBA, NASCAR, MLB, NHL, NCAA college football, men and women's NCAA college basketball, FIFA soccer and PGA Tour, as well as other highly rated team competitions. Most major boxing and martial arts events, including all pay-per-view events from WWE and other promoters, airs on the channel with no additional payment to the viewer.
  • AFN Sports 2. Launched in February 2006, as AFN Xtra. It is AFN's exclusive home for UFC and WWE programming, including all pay-per-view events, as well as motor sports, including NASCAR, NHRA, Motocross and other auto and motorcycle racing series.
  • AFN Sports HD. AFN Sports is also now available in digital high definition using the new Cisco D9865 receiver/decoder.

Internet radio edit

In November 2013, the American Forces Network launched Internet radio streams expanding the reach of the military network's radio programming overseas.[47]

Regional stations edit

AFN Europe edit

The internet radio stations in Europe are as follows:[48]

AFN Pacific edit

The internet radio stations in the Asia-Pacific region are as follows:[61]

  • Japan
    • Iwakuni
    • Misawa
    • Okinawa
    • Sasebo
    • Tokyo
  • South Korea
      • Casey
      • Daegu
      • Kunsan
      • Osan
      • Yongsan
  • Diego Garcia
  • AFN Go programs edit

    AFN Go, formerly AFN 360, provides the following nine music and spoken word stations.[61]

    AFN Go's Internet streams are only made available in countries where AFN has terrestrial stations (i.e., where the U.S. armed forces have established bases) and are not available in North America. AFN Go uses IP address geolocation to determine whether a listener can access the streams. AFN stations can be accessed where it is not available through proxy servers.

    As of late 2022, AFN launched a new video streaming service named AFN|Now with mobile applications for Android (operating system), iPhone, Roku, & Amazon FireTV[62]

    AFN frequencies and transmitters by country (alphabetical) edit

    Bahrain edit

    Radio: AFN Bahrain

    Belgium edit

    Television:

    Historical data only – AFN Prime Atlantic/AFN Benelux (NTSC)

    Terrestrial transmission of the AFN TV service in Belgium ended in 2010. [63]

    Radio: AFN Benelux – The Eagle

    • 101.7 FM: Everberg, Kortenberg (900 W) serving NATO HQ and much of northern Brussels Capital Region
    • 106.2 FM: Kleine Brogel, Peer (200 W)
    • 106.5 FM: SHAPE, Casteau (200 W)
    • 107.9 FM: Chièvres (100 W)

    [64]

    Cuba edit

    Radio GTMO transmits locally for Guantanamo Bay Naval Base.[65]

    • 1340 AM: News and talk radio rebroadcasts
    • 102.1 FM: Top 40, urban, dance, rock music
    • 103.1 FM: Country music

    Germany edit

    Mediumwave AM edit

    Frequency Power Location Description of transmitter site Geographical location Remarks
    873 kHz 150 kW Weisskirchen 3 guyed lattice steel masts insulated against ground, height: now closed 86 meters (282 ft),
    Directional Antenna Mode
    50°10′59″N 8°36′45″E / 50.18306°N 8.61250°E / 50.18306; 8.61250 Shut down on 31 May 2013
    1107 kHz 10 kW Grafenwöhr 66-meter-tall (217 ft) guyed tubular steel mast insulated against ground 49°42′47″N 11°54′42″E / 49.71306°N 11.91167°E / 49.71306; 11.91167 Shut down in 2008
    Mast dismantled in 2009
    1107 kHz 10 kW Vilseck 65-meter-tall (213 ft) guyed tubular steel mast insulated against ground 49°38′41″N 11°47′1″E / 49.64472°N 11.78361°E / 49.64472; 11.78361 Shut down on 31 October 2016
    (last German AM station)
    1107 kHz 10 kW Berlin-Dahlem 126-meter-tall (413 ft) guyed lattice steel mast insulated against ground 52°27′47″N 13°17′26″E / 52.46306°N 13.29056°E / 52.46306; 13.29056 Shut down on 15 July 1994,
    Mast demolished on
    14 December 1996
    1107 kHz 10 kW Nürnberg 122-meter-tall (400 ft) guyed lattice steel mast insulated against ground Shut down
    1107 kHz 10 kW Kaiserslautern-Otterbach 136-meter-tall (446 ft) guyed lattice steel mast insulated against ground 49°29′27″N 7°43′3″E / 49.49083°N 7.71750°E / 49.49083; 7.71750 Shut down on 31 August 2014
    1107 kHz 40 kW Munich-Ismaning 2 guyed lattice steel masts insulated against ground, height: 94 meters (308 ft) 48°14′40″N 11°44′42″E / 48.24444°N 11.74500°E / 48.24444; 11.74500 Shut down in 2005
    1143 kHz 1 kW Bitburg 54-meter-tall (177 ft) guyed mast radiator 49°56′35″N 6°32′29″E / 49.94306°N 6.54139°E / 49.94306; 6.54139 Shut down
    1143 kHz 5 kW Bremerhaven 65-meter-tall (213 ft) guyed mast radiator Shut down on 31 March 1993
    1143 kHz 10 kW Stuttgart-Hirschlanden 40-meter-tall (130 ft) guyed lattice steel mast insulated against ground 48°49′43″N 9°2′11″E / 48.82861°N 9.03639°E / 48.82861; 9.03639 Operated by Media Broadcast
    Shut down, 7 March 2014
    1143 kHz 1 kW Heidelberg 65-meter (213 ft) guyed tubular steel mast insulated against ground 49°25′58″N 8°38′42″E / 49.43278°N 8.64500°E / 49.43278; 8.64500 Shut down on 28 April 2014
    1143 kHz 1 kW Hof 45-meter-tall (148 ft) guyed mast radiator Shut down
    1143 kHz 1 kW Karlsruhe 61-meter-tall (200 ft) guyed mast radiator Shut down
    1143 kHz 1 kW Mönchengladbach 45.5-meter-tall (149 ft) guyed lattice steel mast insulated against ground 51°10′2″N 6°23′56″E / 51.16722°N 6.39889°E / 51.16722; 6.39889 Shut down on 27 January 2016
    1143 kHz 300 W Göppingen 37-meter-tall (121 ft) guyed mast radiator Shut down
    1143 kHz 300 W Würzburg 40-meter-tall (130 ft) guyed lattice steel mast insulated against ground 49°47′26″N 9°58′54″E / 49.79056°N 9.98167°E / 49.79056; 9.98167 Shut down in 2008
    1143 kHz 300 W Bamberg 40-meter-tall (130 ft) guyed lattice steel mast insulated against ground 49°53′17″N 10°55′24″E / 49.88806°N 10.92333°E / 49.88806; 10.92333 Shut down in December 2013
    1143 kHz 300 W Schweinfurt T-antenna between 2 40-meter-tall (130 ft)? free-standing lattice towers 50°3′6″N 10°10′31″E / 50.05167°N 10.17528°E / 50.05167; 10.17528 to shut down in 2014
    1143 kHz 300 W Bad Kissingen 48-meter-tall (157 ft) guyed mast radiator shut down
    1143 kHz 300 W Wildflecken 45-meter-tall (148 ft) guyed mast radiator Shut down
    1143 kHz 300 W Fulda 54-meter-tall (177 ft) guyed mast radiator Shut down
    1143 kHz 300 W Bad Hersfeld 25-meter-tall (82 ft) free-standing tower insulated against ground Shut down
    1143 kHz 300 W Giessen 61-meter-tall (200 ft) guyed lattice steel mast insulated against ground 50°35′27″N 8°43′6″E / 50.59083°N 8.71833°E / 50.59083; 8.71833 Shut down
    1485 kHz 1 kW Augsburg 56-meter-tall (184 ft) guyed lattice steel mast insulated against ground 48°21′8″N 10°51′19″E / 48.35222°N 10.85528°E / 48.35222; 10.85528 Shut down in 1998
    mast demolished in 2008
    1485 kHz 300 W Crailsheim 65-meter-tall (213 ft) guyed mast radiator Shut down
    1485 kHz 300 W Hohenfels 40-meter-tall (130 ft) guyed lattice steel mast insulated against ground 49°13′14″N 11°51′12″E / 49.22056°N 11.85333°E / 49.22056; 11.85333 Shut down
    1485 kHz 300 W Ansbach-Katterbach 67-meter-tall (220 ft) guyed tubular steel mast insulated against ground 49°19′17″N 10°35′44″E / 49.32139°N 10.59556°E / 49.32139; 10.59556 Shut down
    1485 kHz 300 W Regensburg Long wire antenna on wooden 20-meter (66 ft) tower Shut down
    1485 kHz 300 W Garmisch-Partenkirchen 30-meter-tall (98 ft) guyed mast radiator 47°28′58″N 11°3′20″E / 47.48278°N 11.05556°E / 47.48278; 11.05556 Shut down
    1485 kHz 300 W Berchtesgaden 34-meter-tall (112 ft) guyed mast radiator Shut down

    FM edit

    Frequency Power Location Description of transmitter site geographical location Remarks
    87.7 MHz 0.1 kW Schweinfurt Shut down
    87.9 MHz 1 kW Berlin Now used by Star FM Maximum Rock
    89.9 MHz 0.245 kW Amberg Transmits AFN Bavaria
    90.3 MHz 0.05 kW Garmisch-Partenkirchen Transmits AFN Bavaria
    90.3 MHz 0.02 kW Prien Shut down
    92.2 MHz Memmingen Shut down
    92.9 MHz Garlstedt Shut down
    93.5 MHz 1 kW Sögel Shut down
    93.5 MHz 0.25 kW Hohenfels Transmits AFN Bavaria
    96.5 MHz Helmstedt Shut down
    97.7 MHz 0.1 kW Bad Aibling Shut down
    98.5 MHz 1 kW Grafenwoehr Transmits AFN Bavaria
    98.7 MHz 50 kW Grosser Feldberg Shut down on 19 January 2017
    98.7 MHz Birkenfeld Shut down
    98.9 MHz 0.1 kW Bamberg Shut down
    100 MHz 15 kW Augsburg Shut down
    100.2 MHz 5 kW Kaiserslautern-Vogelweh now 105.1 MHz
    102.3 MHz 100 kW Stuttgart 193-meter-tall (633 ft) concrete tower 48°45′49″N 9°12′20″E / 48.76361°N 9.20556°E / 48.76361; 9.20556 Telekom transmitter
    102.6 MHz Schwäbisch Gmünd Shut down
    102.6 MHz Ulm Shut down
    103.0 MHz 0.375 kW Pirmasens
    103.7 MHz 0.5 kW Wiesbaden/Mainz-Kastel Opened on 19 January 2017
    (in exchange for Grosser Feldberg)
    104.1 MHz Grafenwöhr Moved to 98.5 MHz
    104.6 MHz 0.375 kW Heidelberg Aerial on AM broadcasting mast 49°25′58″N 8°38′42″E / 49.43278°N 8.64500°E / 49.43278; 8.64500 Shut down
    104.9 MHz 0.375 kW Illesheim Moved to 98.5 MHz
    104.9 MHz 0.16 kW Würzburg Aerial on AM broadcasting mast 49°47′26″N 9°58′54″E / 49.79056°N 9.98167°E / 49.79056; 9.98167 Shut down
    105.1 MHz 1 kW Spangdahlem Aerial on AM broadcasting mast 49°56′35″N 6°32′29″E / 49.94306°N 6.54139°E / 49.94306; 6.54139
    105.1 MHz Kaiserslautern Transmits AFN Kaiserslautern
    105.1 MHz Rheinberg Shut down
    105.2 MHz Hessisch Oldendorf Shut down
    106.1 MHz Kalkar Shut down
    106.1 MHz 0.02 kW Baumholder Transmits AFN Kaiserslautern
    106.5 MHz Flensburg Shut down
    107.3 MHz 0.05 kW Heidelberg Shut down
    107.3 MHz 1 kW Ansbach Transmits AFN Bavaria
    107.3 MHz Mannheim-Käfertal Shut down
    107.4 MHz 0.3 kW Fürth Shut down
    107.6 MHz Bad Godesberg Shut down
    107.7 MHz 0.25 kW Vilseck Transmits AFN Bavaria
    107.9 MHz Bremerhaven Shut down

    The AFN transmitters in Germany are operated by different authorities but most are operated directly by the U.S. military. Some are the property of Deutsche Telekom, while others are controlled by German public broadcasting corporations.

    Greece edit

    Honduras edit

    Iraq Freedom Radio edit

    [All Freedom Radio–Iraq stations went off the air on 30 September 2011, as a result of the continuing draw-down of U.S. Military personnel. Listing remains to document the coverage of Iraq.]

    Italy edit

     
    A host at American Forces Network Sigonella holds on-air interviews with former NFL players Prince Amukamara, Amobi Okoye and Brandon Bostick in 2023

    In Italy there are 4 radio stations that serve 5 bases and more than 14 cities:

    • AFN The Eagle – 106.0 FM
      • Monte Serra – AFN Livorno (After the closing of AFN Livorno it will be transmitted AFN Vicenza) in Pisa (Camp Darby), Livorno, Viareggio and the surrounding area.
      • Monte Venda – AFN Vicenza in Vicenza (Caserma Ederle and Del Din), Verona, Venezia, Padova, Sud Treviso and the surrounding area.
      • Aviano – AFN Aviano in Pordenone (Aviano Air Base), Udine and the surrounding area.
    • AFN Naples – 107.9 FM Collina dei Camaldoli Naples (Naval Base), Caserta, South Avellino and the highest zones (there are interferences)
    • AFN Sigonella – 105.9 FM in Catania (Naval and Air Base), North Siracusa and the surrounding area.
    • AFN Power Network
      • Monte Serra – AFN Livorno Power (After the closing of AFN Livorno it will be transmitted AFN Vicenza) in Pisa (Camp Darby), Livorno, Viareggio and the surrounding area.
      • Monte Venda – AFN Vicenza Power in Vicenza (Caserma Ederle and Del Din), Verona, Venezia, Padova, Sud Treviso and the surrounding area.
      • Collina dei Camaldoli – AFN Naples Power in Naples (Naval Base), Caserta, South Avellino and the highest zones (there are interferences).
      • Sigonella – AFN Sigonella Power in Catania (Naval and Air Base), North Siracusa and the surrounding area.
      • Aviano – AFN Aviano Power in Pordenone (Aviano Air Base), Udine and the surrounding area.[66]

    AFN Italy, has been serving Americans that live on American Bases in Pisa, Vicenza, Aviano, Napoli and Sigonella, since 1983.

    Japan edit

    Netherlands edit

    Radio: AFN Soesterberg 1964–1993 (former location at grid 52°7'25"N 5°15'13"E) Transmissions ceased at the dissolution of USAF 32nd TFS

    • AM – AFRS Soesterberg (1140 kHz syndicated 1964–1972 from AFN Bremerhaven) 5 kW[67]
    • FM – AFN Eagle Radio (93.1 MHz live & syndicated 1973–1994 from Camp New Amsterdam/Soesterberg airbase) 0.015 kW[68]

    The morning "Touch and Go" show from 5–9 am and the afternoon "Afterburner" show from 3–6 pm were live. The rest of the hours was syndicated from AFN Frankfurt.

    Television: AFN Benelux syndicated (early 1980s only UHF channel 80 NTSC)[69]

    Currently active radio & TV:

    Saudi Arabia edit

    Table of AFN-transmitters in Saudi Arabia. Table may be incorrect and incomplete. Please correct and expand if necessary.

    FM edit

    [70]
    Frequency Power Signal Type City Transmitter site Approximate Geographical Location Channel Name (Slogan) Genre
    103.1 MHz 100 W Mono Riyadh Eskan Village (Al-Kharj Rd.) 24°34′59″N 46°51′39″E / 24.58306°N 46.86083°E / 24.58306; 46.86083 Voice Channel (NPR News) News, Talkshows, Jazz & Oldies
    103.9 MHz 100 W Mono Riyadh Eskan Village (Al-Kharj Rd.) // Mainstream Country Country
    105.1 MHz 100 W Mono Riyadh Eskan Village (Al-Kharj Rd.) // Z Rock Alternative rock
    105.9 MHz 100 W Mono Riyadh Eskan Village (Al-Kharj Rd.) // Gravity[71] Urban Rhythmic (R&B, Pop & Hip hop)
    107.9 MHz 100 W Mono Riyadh Eskan Village (Al-Kharj Rd.) // Hot AC (Today's Best Hits) Young adult alternative/80's and 90's
    103.1 MHz 21 W Stereo Riyadh Riyadh U.S. Embassy 24°40′52″N 46°37′13″E / 24.68111°N 46.62028°E / 24.68111; 46.62028 Voice Channel (NPR News) News, Talkshows, Jazz & Oldies
    105.1 MHz 10 W Stereo Riyadh Riyadh U.S. Embassy // Z Rock Alternative rock
    107.9 MHz 30 W Stereo Riyadh Riyadh U.S. Embassy // Mainstream Country Country
    93.7 MHz 250 W Mono Jeddah Jeddah U.S. Embassy 21°31′33″N 39°09′52″E / 21.52583°N 39.16444°E / 21.52583; 39.16444 Hot AC (Today's Best Hits) Young adult alternative/80's and 90's
    100.7 MHz 250 W Jeddah Jeddah U.S. Embassy // Voice Channel (NPR News) News, Talkshows, Jazz & Oldies
    103.9 MHz 50 W Stereo Jeddah Jeddah U.S. Embassy // Jack FM 1980s & 1990s

    The AFN FM Transmitters in Saudi Arabia are managed by the U.S. military.

    Spain edit

    Radio: AFN Rota Radio – The Eagle

    South Korea edit

    Television edit

    NOTE: All over-the-air television broadcasts in South Korea ended in May 2012. The following are previous stations.

    AM Radio (Thunder AM) edit

    FM Radio (AFN Eagle) edit

    resource:[72]

    Turkey edit

    Radio: AFN Incirlik – The Eagle

    Shortwave (USB) edit

    The last known confirmation of AFN using its shortwave frequencies was in the mid-2010s. Current (2022) bandscans show no signal on any of AFN's frequencies.

     
    QSL card from AFRTS

    See: AFN Shortwave Frequencies[73]

    See also edit

    References edit

    1. ^ "The American Forces Network". MilitaryBenefits.info. 13 June 2019. Retrieved 30 September 2020.
    2. ^ Vernon, Tom (17 August 2017). "AFRTS Celebrates 75th Anniversary: Radio and television networks serve American service men and women worldwide". radioworld.com. Future Publishing Limited. Retrieved 30 September 2020.
    3. ^ a b (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 20 February 2012. Retrieved 14 March 2012.
    4. ^ . Afrts.dodmedia.osd.mil. Archived from the original on 15 December 2009. Retrieved 31 December 2009.
    5. ^ Mackenzie, Harry (1999). The Directory of the Armed Forces Radio Service Series (Viva America for Spanish speaking servicemen). Westport CT: Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 21. ISBN 9780313308123. ISBN 0313308128
    6. ^ Bronfman, Alejanda; Wood, Andrew Grant (2012). Media Sound & Culture in Latin America. Pittsburgh, PA: University of Pittsburgh Press. p. 49. ISBN 9780822977957. ISBN 978-0822961871
    7. ^ Anthony, Edwin D. (1973). "Records of the Radio Division" (PDF). Records of the Office of Inter-American Affairs. Vol. Inventory of Record Group 229. Washington D.C.: National Archives and Record Services – General Services Administration. pp. 25–26. LCCN 73-600146.
    8. ^ Dissonant Divas in Chicana Music: The Limits of La Onda Deborah R. Vargas. University of Minnesota Press, Minneapolis, 2012 pp. 152–155 ISBN 978-0816673162 OCIAA (Office of the Coordinator of Inter-American Affairs), FDR's Good Neighbor Policy, CBS, Viva America, Armed Forces Radio Service and La Cadena de las Americas on google.books.com
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    Further reading edit

    External videos
      The Story of American Forces Network (AFN) – The Big Picture, YouTube video
      1980's AFN Special "An Inside Look", YouTube video
    • History of AFRTS: The first 50 years. U.S. Government Printing Office (1993).
    • Patrick Morley: 'This Is the American Forces Network': The Anglo-American Battle of the Air Waves in World War II. Praeger Publishing (2001).
    • Trent Christman: Brass Button Broadcasters: A Lighthearted Look at Fifty Years of Military Broadcasting. Turner Publishing (1992).

    External links edit

      Media related to American Forces Network at Wikimedia Commons

    • Official website  
    • Armed Forces Network, Europe at usarmygermany.com
    • Armed Forces Network, Europe
    • AFN Go, AFN Europe
    • Armed Forces Network, Pacific
    • AFN Go, AFN Pacific
    • AFN Bavaria livestream

    american, forces, network, armed, forces, radio, redirects, here, nigerian, radio, station, armed, forces, radio, nigeria, this, article, possibly, contains, original, research, please, improve, verifying, claims, made, adding, inline, citations, statements, c. Armed Forces Radio redirects here For the Nigerian radio station see Armed Forces Radio Nigeria This article possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed June 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message The American Forces Network AFN is a government television and radio broadcast service the U S military provides to those stationed or assigned overseas Headquartered at Fort George G Meade Maryland AFN s broadcast operations which include global radio and television satellite feeds emanate from the AFN Broadcast Center Defense Media Center in Riverside California 1 AFN was founded on 26 May 1942 in London as the Armed Forces Radio Service AFRS 2 American Forces NetworkFounded26 May 1942 81 years ago 1942 05 26 as the Armed Forces Radio Service FounderUnited States Armed ForcesHeadquartersFort George G Meade Maryland United StatesProductsTelevision RadioOwnerIndependent 1942 1980 United States Armed Forces 1942 present ParentIndependent 1942 1980 Office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Public Affairs 1980 present American Forces Radio and Television Service 1980 present Websitemyafn wbr dodmedia wbr osd wbr mil Contents 1 History 1 1 Origins 1 2 World War II 1 3 Post war contraction and expansion 1 4 Post War Europe 1 5 Korean War 1 6 Pahlavi Iran 1 7 South Vietnam 1 8 Thailand 1 9 Taiwan 1 10 Caribbean 1 11 Central America 1 12 Shortwave radio 2 Organization 3 Television services 3 1 European operations 3 2 Pacific operations 3 2 1 South Korea 3 2 2 Japan 3 2 3 Latin America 3 2 4 Kwajalein Atoll 3 3 Gulf War 3 4 Operation Iraqi Freedom 3 5 Operation Enduring Freedom 3 6 Operations in Western Europe 4 Media services 4 1 AFN programming 4 1 1 Radio 4 1 2 Television 4 1 2 1 Channels 5 Internet radio 5 1 Regional stations 5 1 1 AFN Europe 5 1 2 AFN Pacific 5 2 AFN Go programs 6 AFN frequencies and transmitters by country alphabetical 6 1 Bahrain 6 2 Belgium 6 3 Cuba 6 4 Germany 6 4 1 Mediumwave AM 6 4 2 FM 6 5 Greece 6 6 Honduras 6 7 Iraq Freedom Radio 6 8 Italy 6 9 Japan 6 10 Netherlands 6 11 Saudi Arabia 6 11 1 FM 6 12 Spain 6 13 South Korea 6 13 1 Television 6 13 2 AM Radio Thunder AM 6 13 3 FM Radio AFN Eagle 6 14 Turkey 6 15 Shortwave USB 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksHistory editThe American Forces Network can trace its origins to 26 May 1942 when the War Department established the Armed Forces Radio Service AFRS 3 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 3 All the Armed Forces broadcasting affiliates worldwide merged under the AFN banner on 1 January 1998 On 21 November 2000 the American Forces Information Service directed a change of the AFRTS organizational title from Armed Forces Radio and Television Service back to American Forces Radio and Television Service A timeline of the history of AFN is available online 4 Origins edit KODK began broadcasting from the U S Army base Greeley at Kodiak Alaska before the inception of the AFRS Fort Greeley being first in Kodiak Fort Abercrombie today Fort Greeley Delta Junction was built to defend and was an integral part of the Kodiak Naval Air Station sometimes called Naval Operating Base Construction of both was under way in 1940 The naval station and AFRS radio remained in operation but Fort Greely closed at the end of World War II Years later the name Fort Greely was resurrected for the Big Delta near Delta Junction Army base The small town of Kodiak located six miles away had no radio station while Anchorage and Fairbanks where Army and Army Air Force bases soon would be established had civilian radio stations Thus KODK had a primary role to bring radio to the armed forces and civilians in the Kodiak area The sign off at KODK was the memorable Goodnight Sweetheart set to a stirring melody from Liszt s Les Preludes The station lived on to bring the first television to Kodiak 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 edit nbsp Bob Hope welcomes Jane Russell to Command Performance 1944 nbsp Frank Sinatra 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 nbsp Humphrey Bogart and Lauren Bacall being interviewed by the Armed Forces Radio ServiceThe U S Army 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 a BBC News and sports broadcast That day Corporal 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 AFN 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 the CBS 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 5 6 7 8 Post war contraction and expansion edit nbsp Lionel Barrymore 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 the 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 9 10 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 edit 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 11 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 12 13 In France about a dozen AFN stations operated with AFN Orleans 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 Orleans 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 Orleans via Frankfurt Germany It was the only other studio station affiliate of AFN Orleans 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 Armees Alliees or AAA citation needed Korean War edit 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 edit An AFRTS radio station became operational in Tehran Iran in 1959 14 This was followed by a television station in 1960 15 known as AFTV 16 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 17 Its listeners and viewers were American military personnel stationed in Iran as part of ARMISH the US Army mission and Military Assistance Advisory Group MAAG programs 14 AFTV was also popular with Iranian viewers particularly children 18 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 19 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 20 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 21 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 22 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 23 24 25 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 26 South Vietnam edit As the U S military presence in South Vietnam increased AFRTS opened radio and later television stations there 27 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 27 and had several stations including Qui Nhơn Nha Trang Pleiku Da Nang and Huế the latter being overrun by the People s Army of Vietnam during the Battle of Hue in January February 1968 and replaced by a station in Quảng Trị AFVN s headquarters station was located in Saigon In Vietnam AFVN had a number of war related casualties After a fierce fire fight that killed two soldiers and a civilian contractor the remaining AFVN station staff at Huế was captured and spent five years as prisoners of war At the height of American involvement in the war Armed Forces Vietnam Network served more than 500 000 fighting men and women at one time AFVN developed a program along the lines of GI Jive from World War II A number of local disc jockeys helped make hourlong music programs for broadcast Perhaps the best known program became the morning Dawn Buster program the brainchild of Chief Petty Officer Bryant Arbuckle in 1962 thanks to the popularity of the sign on slogan Gooooood Morning Vietnam which was initiated by Adrian Cronauer and later became the basis for the film Good Morning Vietnam starring Robin Williams Among the notable people who were AFVN disc jockeys were Don L Scotty Brink Lee Hansen Les Coleman and Pat Sajak Chris Noel and Denny Woytek Harry Simons hosted the GO Show at both AFVN Saigon and Danang in 1968 and 1969 Simons along with broadcaster Mike Bates created and produced a 10 hour radio documentary AFVN The GI s Companion as a tribute to AFVN and to honor all Vietnam Veterans It aired and streamed on Veterans Day 2015 on WEBY Radio in Pensacola Florida The documentary is archived at Rock Radio Scrapbook AFVN The GI s Companion 28 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 29 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 edit 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 30 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 edit See also ICRT 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 edit 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 edit 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 31 just before the 31 December 32 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 edit 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 editThe American Forces Network AFN is the operational arm of the American Forces Radio and Television Service AFRTS an office of the Defense Media Activity DMA AFN falls under the operational control of the Office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Public Affairs OASD PA Editorial control is by the Department of Defense whereas the British Forces Broadcasting Service BFBS for example is independent of the Ministry of Defence and the British armed forces AFN employs military broadcasters as well as Defense Department civilians and contractors Service personnel hold broadcasting occupational specialties for their military branch Since 1997 all of AFN s military personnel receive primary training at the Defense Information School DINFOS at Fort George G Meade in Maryland Before 1997 DINFOS was located at Fort Benjamin Harrison in Indianapolis Indiana In 1997 Fort Benjamin Harrison was largely closed as a function of the 1991 Base Closure and Realignment Commission Additional Advanced training is also available at Fort George G Meade In the 1960s DINFOS was located at Fort Slocum NY on a small island just off the harbor at New Rochelle At its peak in 1965 the Army Chaplain school was also located there In 1963 the campus operated in a university setting with a relaxed military environment The Army ran the Information School although training was offered to members of all military branches Radio types took a rather severe audition written by CBS for their network announcers Those who survived the audition became Broadcast Specialists with a 703 MOS and went on to an AFRTS assignment Some of AFN s broadcasters have previous commercial broadcasting experience before enlisting in the military but it is not a prerequisite for enlistment in the military as a broadcaster During their training the broadcasters are taught to use state of the art audio and visual editing equipment similar to their civilian counterparts AFN management is located at DMA headquarters at Fort Meade Day to day AFN broadcast operations are conducted at the AFN Broadcast Center Defense Media Center in Riverside California from where all global radio and television satellite feeds emanate Television services editEuropean operations edit Until the early 1970s U S military television service was provided in Western Europe by Air Force Television at Ramstein Air Base Germany In the early 1970s AFN assumed this responsibility for the Armed Forces Radio and Television Service AFRTS AFN Bremerhaven was the first AFN television station in Europe to broadcast its programming in color The U S European Edition of Stars and Stripes S amp S reported in its Thursday 21 August 1975 edition that the AFN Europe Commander Lt Col Floyd A McBride announced that AFN s first color TV broadcast would begin in Bremerhaven on Monday 25 August 1975 As S amp S reported because Bremerhaven s TV operation was so small only a Class C operation and at the time served only one area with TV programming it was easy to establish the color TV broadcast operation without extensive expense or expansion 33 That next year S amp S reported in its Wednesday 23 June 1976 edition that the long awaited switch to color by AFN TV could come by the end of the year for viewers in most of West Germany The only viewers enjoying color right now are those watching the pilot color TV station in Bremerhaven which went on the air in 1975 33 Finally on 28 October 1976 AFN television moved from AFTV s old black and white studios at Ramstein to the network s new color television studios in Frankfurt In the 1980s the network added affiliates with studio capabilities in Wurzburg Germany and Soesterberg the Netherlands expanding the network to 12 affiliate stations serving American military DOD employed civilians and their families estimated to be well above 350 000 stationed in West Germany the Netherlands and Belgium This was accomplished by a system of 112 microwave transmitters operated and maintained by the Army s 5th Signal Command Embassies and other entities of the American government without access to AFN TV signals received a 30 plus hour package mailed weekly of AFN and U S programming In April 1984 AFN began broadcasting live news information and entertainment programming received through an 11 meter satellite dish downlink at AFN network headquarters in addition to primetime pre recorded shows and movies received from the Armed Forces Radio Television Service broadcast center in Hollywood For outlying areas broadcast feeds of live American sports events were frequently provided by European contractors AFN TV was available in West Berlin until 1994 34 However it was only available in the American Sector 35 In 2004 AFN Europe headquarters relocated to Coleman Barracks in Mannheim Germany In 2014 AFN Europe headquarters relocated to Sembach Kaserne in Sembach Germany Pacific operations edit Over the air TV for U S Forces in the Pacific is currently provided by AFN Korea AFN Japan and AFN Kwajalein All local operations merged under the AFN banner effective 1 January 1998 South Korea edit AFN Korea formerly American Forces Korea Network AFKN was the largest of AFN s Pacific TV operations although there are also AM and FM operations from military bases around Korea AFKN began TV operations on 15 September 1957 and consisted of an originating studio at Yongsan Garrison Seoul and six relay transmitters throughout the peninsula AFKN s first live television newscast aired on 4 January 1959 Until December 2007 the channel was widely available to non military audiences on cable television but following complaints from U S companies trying to sell programs in South Korea USFK requested that the Korean Broadcasting Commission direct the removal of Pacific Prime from the Korean cable lineups 36 American Forces Network Korea discontinued analog over the air TV broadcast 1 May 2012 due to request from the South Korean government because many local residents could receive current over the air U S network programming resulting in decreased sales of U S programs to South Korean stations 37 Japan edit AFN Japan formerly the Far East Network FEN had one full power VHF terrestrial TV outlet located on Okinawa atop the Rycom Plaza Housing area in the central part of the island AFN Okinawa s U S channel 8 TV signal served Marines Airmen Sailors Soldiers and their families stationed on island TV viewers on military bases in the Tokyo and Kanto Plain area of Japan can view AFN via contractor operated base cable TV services or through AFN Direct To Home DTH dish services if they reside off base AFN Japan s radio services consist of AM and FM stereo operations at Yokota Air Base 810 AM amp cable FM MCAS Iwakuni 1575 AM FLTACTS Sasebo 1575 AM Okinawa 648 AM amp 89 1 FM and Misawa Air Base 1575 AM AFN Okinawa ceased over the air analog TV operations along with all other Japanese TV stations on July 24 2011 Latin America edit There used to be a television service in Panama SCN from 1956 to 1999 Broadcast on channel 8 in the Pacific zone and channel 10 in the Atlantic zone In 1999 from the termination of local production June 30 to the shutdown of the station and return of the control of the Panama Canal to the Panamanian state December 31 the channel was relaying the main AFN service After its closure the Panamanian regulatory body aimed at bidding channel 8 and its relay station to local companies but the bid was frozen in March 2000 38 39 40 In 2001 following failed attempts at creating a regional educational station 41 the Panamanian government started setting a date for the fate of the former SCN frequencies July 10 42 43 Since no company successfully bid for those licenses channels 7 and 9 in the capital zone were given for a bid Tele 7 now Oye and TVMax both starting in 2005 Kwajalein Atoll edit AFN Kwajalein at the Reagan Missile Test Range on Kwajalein Atoll is the only civilian run affiliate in AFN broadcasting on U S channel 13 for military personnel and civilian contractor employees and their families AFN Kwajalein s signal is beamed by microwave to the nearby island of Roi Namur and rebroadcast on channel 8 With the availability of AFN s DTH service terrestrial over the air TV broadcasts at all AFN outlets are slated for deactivation in the near future Gulf War edit In January 1991 the network dispatched news teams and technicians to Kuwait and Saudi Arabia for Operations Desert Shield and Desert Storm These broadcasters reported to families of soldiers deployed from Europe and staffed a number of U S radio stations making up the Armed Forces Desert Network The first song on the air after the start of the ground offensive was Rock the Casbah by The Clash The network first signed on under the name Desert Shield Network in Al Jubayl on September 12 1990 but operated 24 hours of programming since January 2 1991 As of January 1991 the Desert Shield Network is staffed by more than 50 military broadcasters operating out of four vans in the cities of Riyadh Dhahran Al Jubayl and King Khalid Military City and reaches nearly 90 of the U S military personnel featuring a 50 50 mix of news and contemporary music with jingles produced by JAM Creative Productions during each break of song or news breaks At the time the network began producing three minutes of local news per day which later expanded in its lineup The vans are mobile studios containing 21 relay transmitters carrying radio signals to troops on various FM frequencies depending on location Right after the operation became known as Desert Storm it retained its Desert Shield Network name due to the staff expecting to continue operations for an unspecified period of time until the end Operation Iraqi Freedom edit nbsp AFN Iraq on air radio studio Baghdad Iraq April 2004 AFN Iraq began broadcasting in December 2003 on the FM band shortly after the fall of Saddam The first song on the air was Freedom by Paul McCartney Within a short time Freedom Radio was broadcasting on multiple FM channels from as far south as Basra to as far north as Mosul AFN Iraq Freedom Radio began as a joint effort between the Air Force the Marines and the Army The first unit to operate the station was the 222nd Broadcast Operations Detachment an Army Reserve unit based in southern California Always There and on the Air was the phrase that started it all even though there were only eight hours of live radio to kick things off After an introduction from Lt Gen Ricardo Sanchez the commander of Coalition Ground Forces in Iraq Air Force Master Sergeant Erik Brazones was the first DJ on the air When the 222nd BOD took the reins of the radio operations the first two regular radio shows were Niki Cage in the Morning and Abbey in the Afternoon AFN Iraq signed off in 2011 Operation Enduring Freedom edit AFN Afghanistan operated out of a building on Bagram Air Base Its radio frequency throughout Afghanistan was 94 1 and 97 1 in Manas and produced live local shows Its first radio transmission was at 06 o clock 30 min on Friday 21 July 2006 Beyond radio AFN Afghanistan also had television news It produced a daily five minute newscast called Freedom Watch Afghanistan which also aired on the Pentagon Channel The station was typically staffed with Air Force broadcasters but also slots Army Navy and Marine broadcasters as well For support there were usually four man teams of engineers to handle all transmission decoder and satellite issues Operations in Western Europe edit AFN in Germany and SEB Southern European Broadcasting in Italy provided broadcasting to U S troops in Western Europe throughout the Cold War The U S defense drawdown began in earnest after the Gulf War and affected AFN stations across Europe as many stations were consolidated or deactivated with the closing of bases In Europe AFN is still on the air from Tuzla Bosnia and Taszar Hungary to inform and entertain U S forces citation needed AFN went on the air 29 May with service at the Tirana airport in Albania with satellite decoders and large screen televisions placed in high traffic areas At the same time the AFN also advanced into the Yugoslav province of Kosovo along with NATO AFN viewers abroad witnessed live television coverage of the terrorist attacks on the United States on 11 September 2001 During military operations in Afghanistan and Iraq AFN provided non stop coverage of the campaigns AFN broadcast personnel from Europe deployed with the troops to cover events Today AFN has a staffed affiliate in Iraq AFN Baghdad launched in 2003 Wherever large numbers of U S troops are deployed the AFN sets up operation providing news and entertainment from home Today AFN has several satellites and uses advanced digital compression technology to broadcast TV and radio to 177 countries and territories as well as on board U S Navy vessels Media services editThere have been ongoing plans for transitioning AFN TV to HDTV with an estimated completion timeframe between 2015 and 2017 So far AFN has added one HD channel with more being planned However the conversion to HD is an expensive project so timelines and actual transition of channels is highly dependent on availability of funds With the additional Department of Defense budget cuts looming this project could easily be required to slip However AFN is continuing to research more efficient delivery methods in hopes of continuing along the planned path AFN s television service is broadcast in standard North American NTSC format of 525 lines All programming delivered by satellite is PowerVu encrypted DVB While programming is provided to AFN by major American TV networks and program syndicators at little to no cost for copyright and licensing reasons it is intended solely for U S forces personnel authorized Department of Defense civilian employees State Department diplomatic personnel and their families overseas AFN TV is available to authorized viewers by Direct To Home DTH service with set top decoders purchased or leased through military exchanges similar to a membership store licensed contracted commercial cable operators purchased used from other military members the cheapest option or terrestrial signal The advent of DTH service coincides with the phasing out of AFN terrestrial TV broadcasts due to reclamation of frequencies by host nations AFN is considered a non essential service and programming ceases during government shutdowns Sports programming to which the AFN has already purchased rights continues to be carried as the skeleton crew operating AFN for essential programming does not save any money by blacking out the programs AFN programming edit While the audience tunes into AFN to watch their favorite shows or listen to the latest stateside hits entertainment is the candy coating used to attract the military viewer listener AFN s primary mission is to provide access for worldwide regional and local command information CI spots which air during commercial breaks in programming instead of commercial advertisements These CI spots run the gamut from reminding service members to register to vote promoting local command sponsored recreation events and off duty educational programs providing health and wellness tips and listing what s playing at local base movie theaters AFN also inserts public service announcements from the Ad Council Some of the 35 overseas AFN affiliates have the capability to cover the worldwide CI spots placed by the AFN Broadcast Center in California with regional or locally produced CI spots such as localized messages from senior leadership Many service members welcome this approach while others find it troublesome especially during the airing of the Super Bowl The network is allowed to broadcast commercial movie promotion trailers provided by the Army amp Air Force Exchange Service AAFES and the Navy Motion Picture Service NMPS to promote the latest film releases in base theaters worldwide Previously these were the only true commercials authorized for broadcast AFN Radio and TV schedules are available on the organization s website 44 Radio edit AFN also offers a variety of radio programming over its various frequencies throughout the world There is both local programming with military disc jockeys and satellite programming Music programming spans classic rock rhythm and blues Jack FM and country music Ryan Seacrest s American Top 40 AFN The Blend WoodSongs Old Time Radio Hour AFN Country Casey Kasem s American Top 40 AFN s Joe Radio and the American Country Countdown with Kix Brooks AFN Country are broadcast weekly over AFN Radio In addition to music AFN broadcasts syndicated talk radio programs such as Car Talk NPR AFN John Tesh Hot AC The Bob and Sheri Show AFN Joe Radio Le Show NPR AFN Tech Nation AFN The Voice Kidd Kraddick in the Morning AFN the Blend Kim Komando AFN The Voice The Rush Limbaugh Show AFN Power Talk Delilah AFN The Blend The Motley Fool Radio Show AFN The Voice A Prairie Home Companion NPR AFN Doug Stephan AFN The Voice Titillating Sports with Rick Tittle Sports Overnight America AFN FANS Mr Dad Positive Parenting AFN The Voice and other programs from a variety of sources Weekly religious programming is offered to AFN stations via closed circuit On 5 December 2005 liberal progressive Ed Schultz and conservative talk show host Sean Hannity were added to the radio programs provided by the AFN Broadcast Center to its affiliate stations Liberal Alan Colmes rounds out the political talk lineup on The Voice channel On 24 April 2006 AFN Europe launched AFN The Eagle a virtually 24 hour a day radio service format initially modeled after Jack FM but most recently a Hot AC format This replaced ZFM which had more of a contemporary hit radio flavor When the Eagle was launched AFN Europe took control of what local DJs could play Altogether AFN produces ten general use streams for AFN stations to use Of these six are music based two are sports based and three general news talk channels including The Voice which features live play by play of American sports it s also the one heard on shortwave if the shortwave radio has Single sideband installed How these stations use these formats is up to them These formats are AFN The Blend mainstream hits and yesterday s favorites programming from Westwood One and Premiere Networks Formerly known as AFN Hot AC AFN Country country western AFN Gravity urban rhythmic AFN Legacy Deep Classic Rock Gems AFN s Joe Radio 80s 90s AFN Freedom Rock Rock music AFN The Voice News talk and information AFN Clutch sports programming from ESPN and SportsMap AFN Fans sports programming from FOX Sports Radio and Sports Byline USA AFN PowerTalk liberal and conservative talk programming NPR AFN public radio programs from NPR and others Television edit Like its radio counterpart AFN TV tries to air programming from a variety of sources to replicate programming on a typical U S TV channel sourcing from U S commercial networks including PBS and program syndicators at little to no cost since AFN does not air commercials and in that regard cannot profit from airing shows like stations in the United States can In their place AFN inserts public service announcements on various subjects these can be civilian agency spots created by The Ad Council nationally recognized religious and public health charities AFN s own command information spots produced by the AFRTS Radio Television Production Office RTPO or announcements by a regional local AFN affiliate The most common PSAs shown deal with sexual harassment public health and safety force protection anti terrorism pride in service and messages to the troops Some people have found the AFN TV commercials to be repetitive annoying and condescending 45 46 AFN produces and broadcasts eight core satellite television channels in NTSC color They are accessible to both military and foreign service personnel abroad All eight feeds are accessible in core areas including but not limited to European Korean and Japanese posts Much of the rest of the world is limited to a smaller but more widespread naval broadcast Channels edit Unless specified the first telecast of each channel targets the Japan Korea region then replayed several hours later for the Central European time zone AFN Prime Formerly AFN Atlantic and AFN Pacific The standard AFN feed airs current sitcoms dramas syndicated court shows talk shows game shows and reality shows popular in the United States with a time delay from 24 hours to six months or more behind the United States airdates In addition popular U S soap operas such as General Hospital are aired by AFN on a one week tape delay This stream is divided into three feeds AFN Prime Atlantic AFN Prime Freedom Middle East and AFN Prime Pacific the difference between the three is that they are time shifted so that programs air at the same local time in each of the major regions served Japan Korea Central Europe and Iraq Many regional feeds such as AFN Europe and AFN Korea are based on AFN Prime and add local programming to it thus in a way AFN Prime mimics the regular network TV concept AFN Prime Freedom shuttered services in 2013 after the drawdown of troops from the Middle East AFN Spectrum AFN Spectrum started as more of a conservative culture oriented channel with programming from cable networks and classic TV series In a way it mimicked the superstation concept from cablecasters TBS and WGN America However the Spectrum lineup currently contains more conventional programming like American Idol and Ugly Betty as some of the public television and classic fare that made up Spectrum is being reduced but remain the primary constant on the channel AFN News AFN News is a rolling news channel providing news from all major news outlets Newscasts such as the NBC Nightly News Fox News ABC World News Tonight and CBS Evening News were all scheduled to air in the mornings so viewers could watch the headlines live but now they air on a tape delay in the regular early evening slot back to back AFN Family AFN Pulse AFN Family is a general entertainment channel providing programming for children ages 2 to 17 Although the name of the channel suggests programming appropriate for all family members at any time the channel more closely resembles Freeform or Nickelodeon with programming targeted at specific age groups during the course of the day Programming during after school from 3 p m local time to 1 a m local time targets pre schoolers but ages as older children become available to watch in the late morning and day By 1 a m local time programming is targeted at older teens In September 2013 AFN launched a split in Family which was branded AFN Pulse About half of the day s programming remains aimed at the 2 to 13 age group During primetime hours the channel becomes AFN Pulse and showcases programming primarily aimed at the older teen demographic though it remains suitable for family viewing AFN Movie AFN Movie is a channel showcasing movies as well as film oriented programming AFN Sports AFN Sports is a rolling sports channel providing sports news and events including ESPN s SportsCenter and live and delayed broadcasts of the NFL NBA NASCAR MLB NHL NCAA college football men and women s NCAA college basketball FIFA soccer and PGA Tour as well as other highly rated team competitions Most major boxing and martial arts events including all pay per view events from WWE and other promoters airs on the channel with no additional payment to the viewer AFN Sports 2 Launched in February 2006 as AFN Xtra It is AFN s exclusive home for UFC and WWE programming including all pay per view events as well as motor sports including NASCAR NHRA Motocross and other auto and motorcycle racing series AFN Sports HD AFN Sports is also now available in digital high definition using the new Cisco D9865 receiver decoder Internet radio editIn November 2013 the American Forces Network launched Internet radio streams expanding the reach of the military network s radio programming overseas 47 Regional stations edit AFN Europe edit The internet radio stations in Europe are as follows 48 Aviano Bahrain Bavaria 49 Benelux 50 Incirlik 51 Kaiserslautern 52 Lajes Naples 53 Rota 54 Sigonella 55 Souda Bay 56 Spangdahlem 57 Stuttgart 58 Vicenza 59 Wiesbaden 60 AFN Pacific edit The internet radio stations in the Asia Pacific region are as follows 61 JapanIwakuni Misawa Okinawa Sasebo Tokyo South Korea Casey Daegu Kunsan Osan Yongsan Diego Garcia AFN Go programs edit AFN Go formerly AFN 360 provides the following nine music and spoken word stations 61 AFN Country Country music AFN Legacy Mainstream rock AFN Freedom Rock Alternative rock AFN FANS Sports radio Fox Sports Radio plus The Jim Rome Show and Sports Overnight America AFN Gravity Urban contemporary hit radio AFN The Blend Hot AC AFN s Joe radio Adult hits AFN Powertalk Politically driven talk radio both conservative and progressive AFN The voice Short form news updates and timeshifts of Powertalk programs AFN Go s Internet streams are only made available in countries where AFN has terrestrial stations i e where the U S armed forces have established bases and are not available in North America AFN Go uses IP address geolocation to determine whether a listener can access the streams AFN stations can be accessed where it is not available through proxy servers As of late 2022 AFN launched a new video streaming service named AFN Now with mobile applications for Android operating system iPhone Roku amp Amazon FireTV 62 AFN frequencies and transmitters by country alphabetical editThis list related to film television or video is incomplete you can help by adding missing items October 2021 Bahrain edit Radio AFN Bahrain 106 3 FM serves NSA Bahrain and ManamaBelgium edit Television Historical data only AFN Prime Atlantic AFN Benelux NTSC 33H Everberg Kortenberg oriented towards Evere 2 kW 34V SHAPE Casteau 4 5 kW 34V Florennes 10 W Terrestrial transmission of the AFN TV service in Belgium ended in 2010 63 Radio AFN Benelux The Eagle 101 7 FM Everberg Kortenberg 900 W serving NATO HQ and much of northern Brussels Capital Region 106 2 FM Kleine Brogel Peer 200 W 106 5 FM SHAPE Casteau 200 W 107 9 FM Chievres 100 W 64 Cuba edit Radio GTMO transmits locally for Guantanamo Bay Naval Base 65 1340 AM News and talk radio rebroadcasts 102 1 FM Top 40 urban dance rock music 103 1 FM Country musicGermany edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it October 2022 Mediumwave AM edit Frequency Power Location Description of transmitter site Geographical location Remarks873 kHz 150 kW Weisskirchen 3 guyed lattice steel masts insulated against ground height now closed 86 meters 282 ft Directional Antenna Mode 50 10 59 N 8 36 45 E 50 18306 N 8 61250 E 50 18306 8 61250 Shut down on 31 May 20131107 kHz 10 kW Grafenwohr 66 meter tall 217 ft guyed tubular steel mast insulated against ground 49 42 47 N 11 54 42 E 49 71306 N 11 91167 E 49 71306 11 91167 Shut down in 2008Mast dismantled in 20091107 kHz 10 kW Vilseck 65 meter tall 213 ft guyed tubular steel mast insulated against ground 49 38 41 N 11 47 1 E 49 64472 N 11 78361 E 49 64472 11 78361 Shut down on 31 October 2016 last German AM station 1107 kHz 10 kW Berlin Dahlem 126 meter tall 413 ft guyed lattice steel mast insulated against ground 52 27 47 N 13 17 26 E 52 46306 N 13 29056 E 52 46306 13 29056 Shut down on 15 July 1994 Mast demolished on14 December 19961107 kHz 10 kW Nurnberg 122 meter tall 400 ft guyed lattice steel mast insulated against ground Shut down1107 kHz 10 kW Kaiserslautern Otterbach 136 meter tall 446 ft guyed lattice steel mast insulated against ground 49 29 27 N 7 43 3 E 49 49083 N 7 71750 E 49 49083 7 71750 Shut down on 31 August 20141107 kHz 40 kW Munich Ismaning 2 guyed lattice steel masts insulated against ground height 94 meters 308 ft 48 14 40 N 11 44 42 E 48 24444 N 11 74500 E 48 24444 11 74500 Shut down in 20051143 kHz 1 kW Bitburg 54 meter tall 177 ft guyed mast radiator 49 56 35 N 6 32 29 E 49 94306 N 6 54139 E 49 94306 6 54139 Shut down1143 kHz 5 kW Bremerhaven 65 meter tall 213 ft guyed mast radiator Shut down on 31 March 19931143 kHz 10 kW Stuttgart Hirschlanden 40 meter tall 130 ft guyed lattice steel mast insulated against ground 48 49 43 N 9 2 11 E 48 82861 N 9 03639 E 48 82861 9 03639 Operated by Media BroadcastShut down 7 March 20141143 kHz 1 kW Heidelberg 65 meter 213 ft guyed tubular steel mast insulated against ground 49 25 58 N 8 38 42 E 49 43278 N 8 64500 E 49 43278 8 64500 Shut down on 28 April 20141143 kHz 1 kW Hof 45 meter tall 148 ft guyed mast radiator Shut down1143 kHz 1 kW Karlsruhe 61 meter tall 200 ft guyed mast radiator Shut down1143 kHz 1 kW Monchengladbach 45 5 meter tall 149 ft guyed lattice steel mast insulated against ground 51 10 2 N 6 23 56 E 51 16722 N 6 39889 E 51 16722 6 39889 Shut down on 27 January 20161143 kHz 300 W Goppingen 37 meter tall 121 ft guyed mast radiator Shut down1143 kHz 300 W Wurzburg 40 meter tall 130 ft guyed lattice steel mast insulated against ground 49 47 26 N 9 58 54 E 49 79056 N 9 98167 E 49 79056 9 98167 Shut down in 20081143 kHz 300 W Bamberg 40 meter tall 130 ft guyed lattice steel mast insulated against ground 49 53 17 N 10 55 24 E 49 88806 N 10 92333 E 49 88806 10 92333 Shut down in December 20131143 kHz 300 W Schweinfurt T antenna between 2 40 meter tall 130 ft free standing lattice towers 50 3 6 N 10 10 31 E 50 05167 N 10 17528 E 50 05167 10 17528 to shut down in 20141143 kHz 300 W Bad Kissingen 48 meter tall 157 ft guyed mast radiator shut down1143 kHz 300 W Wildflecken 45 meter tall 148 ft guyed mast radiator Shut down1143 kHz 300 W Fulda 54 meter tall 177 ft guyed mast radiator Shut down1143 kHz 300 W Bad Hersfeld 25 meter tall 82 ft free standing tower insulated against ground Shut down1143 kHz 300 W Giessen 61 meter tall 200 ft guyed lattice steel mast insulated against ground 50 35 27 N 8 43 6 E 50 59083 N 8 71833 E 50 59083 8 71833 Shut down1485 kHz 1 kW Augsburg 56 meter tall 184 ft guyed lattice steel mast insulated against ground 48 21 8 N 10 51 19 E 48 35222 N 10 85528 E 48 35222 10 85528 Shut down in 1998mast demolished in 20081485 kHz 300 W Crailsheim 65 meter tall 213 ft guyed mast radiator Shut down1485 kHz 300 W Hohenfels 40 meter tall 130 ft guyed lattice steel mast insulated against ground 49 13 14 N 11 51 12 E 49 22056 N 11 85333 E 49 22056 11 85333 Shut down1485 kHz 300 W Ansbach Katterbach 67 meter tall 220 ft guyed tubular steel mast insulated against ground 49 19 17 N 10 35 44 E 49 32139 N 10 59556 E 49 32139 10 59556 Shut down1485 kHz 300 W Regensburg Long wire antenna on wooden 20 meter 66 ft tower Shut down1485 kHz 300 W Garmisch Partenkirchen 30 meter tall 98 ft guyed mast radiator 47 28 58 N 11 3 20 E 47 48278 N 11 05556 E 47 48278 11 05556 Shut down1485 kHz 300 W Berchtesgaden 34 meter tall 112 ft guyed mast radiator Shut downFM edit Frequency Power Location Description of transmitter site geographical location Remarks87 7 MHz 0 1 kW Schweinfurt Shut down87 9 MHz 1 kW Berlin Now used by Star FM Maximum Rock89 9 MHz 0 245 kW Amberg Transmits AFN Bavaria90 3 MHz 0 05 kW Garmisch Partenkirchen Transmits AFN Bavaria90 3 MHz 0 02 kW Prien Shut down92 2 MHz Memmingen Shut down92 9 MHz Garlstedt Shut down93 5 MHz 1 kW Sogel Shut down93 5 MHz 0 25 kW Hohenfels Transmits AFN Bavaria96 5 MHz Helmstedt Shut down97 7 MHz 0 1 kW Bad Aibling Shut down98 5 MHz 1 kW Grafenwoehr Transmits AFN Bavaria98 7 MHz 50 kW Grosser Feldberg Shut down on 19 January 201798 7 MHz Birkenfeld Shut down98 9 MHz 0 1 kW Bamberg Shut down100 MHz 15 kW Augsburg Shut down100 2 MHz 5 kW Kaiserslautern Vogelweh now 105 1 MHz102 3 MHz 100 kW Stuttgart 193 meter tall 633 ft concrete tower 48 45 49 N 9 12 20 E 48 76361 N 9 20556 E 48 76361 9 20556 Telekom transmitter102 6 MHz Schwabisch Gmund Shut down102 6 MHz Ulm Shut down103 0 MHz 0 375 kW Pirmasens103 7 MHz 0 5 kW Wiesbaden Mainz Kastel Opened on 19 January 2017 in exchange for Grosser Feldberg 104 1 MHz Grafenwohr Moved to 98 5 MHz104 6 MHz 0 375 kW Heidelberg Aerial on AM broadcasting mast 49 25 58 N 8 38 42 E 49 43278 N 8 64500 E 49 43278 8 64500 Shut down104 9 MHz 0 375 kW Illesheim Moved to 98 5 MHz104 9 MHz 0 16 kW Wurzburg Aerial on AM broadcasting mast 49 47 26 N 9 58 54 E 49 79056 N 9 98167 E 49 79056 9 98167 Shut down105 1 MHz 1 kW Spangdahlem Aerial on AM broadcasting mast 49 56 35 N 6 32 29 E 49 94306 N 6 54139 E 49 94306 6 54139105 1 MHz Kaiserslautern Transmits AFN Kaiserslautern105 1 MHz Rheinberg Shut down105 2 MHz Hessisch Oldendorf Shut down106 1 MHz Kalkar Shut down106 1 MHz 0 02 kW Baumholder Transmits AFN Kaiserslautern106 5 MHz Flensburg Shut down107 3 MHz 0 05 kW Heidelberg Shut down107 3 MHz 1 kW Ansbach Transmits AFN Bavaria107 3 MHz Mannheim Kafertal Shut down107 4 MHz 0 3 kW Furth Shut down107 6 MHz Bad Godesberg Shut down107 7 MHz 0 25 kW Vilseck Transmits AFN Bavaria107 9 MHz Bremerhaven Shut downThe AFN transmitters in Germany are operated by different authorities but most are operated directly by the U S military Some are the property of Deutsche Telekom while others are controlled by German public broadcasting corporations Greece edit 106 3 MHz FM Souda Bay Air BaseHonduras edit 106 3 MHz FM Soto Cano Air Base 20 WIraq Freedom Radio edit All Freedom Radio Iraq stations went off the air on 30 September 2011 as a result of the continuing draw down of U S Military personnel Listing remains to document the coverage of Iraq 93 3 MHz FM Baghdad FOB Union III Transmitter Never Completed Fallujah Camp Baharia Al Taqaddum Airbase TQ 101 1 MHz FM Tikrit COB Speicher 104 5 MHz FM Baquba FOB Warhorse Transmitter Never Completed 105 1 MHz FM Mosul Camp Diamondback FOB Marez 1 kW 107 3 MHz FM Al Asad Airbase Balad LSA Anaconda 250 W Nasiriyah Tallil Air Base 200 W Qayyarah Airfield West Q WEST 250 W Ramadi FOB Blue Diamond Samarra FOB Brassfield Mora Camp Taji Tall Afar FOB Sykes Umm Qasr Camp Bucca 107 7 MHz FM Baghdad Camp Slayer 1 kWItaly edit nbsp A host at American Forces Network Sigonella holds on air interviews with former NFL players Prince Amukamara Amobi Okoye and Brandon Bostick in 2023In Italy there are 4 radio stations that serve 5 bases and more than 14 cities AFN The Eagle 106 0 FM Monte Serra AFN Livorno After the closing of AFN Livorno it will be transmitted AFN Vicenza in Pisa Camp Darby Livorno Viareggio and the surrounding area Monte Venda AFN Vicenza in Vicenza Caserma Ederle and Del Din Verona Venezia Padova Sud Treviso and the surrounding area Aviano AFN Aviano in Pordenone Aviano Air Base Udine and the surrounding area AFN Naples 107 9 FM Collina dei Camaldoli Naples Naval Base Caserta South Avellino and the highest zones there are interferences AFN Sigonella 105 9 FM in Catania Naval and Air Base North Siracusa and the surrounding area AFN Power Network Monte Serra AFN Livorno Power After the closing of AFN Livorno it will be transmitted AFN Vicenza in Pisa Camp Darby Livorno Viareggio and the surrounding area Monte Venda AFN Vicenza Power in Vicenza Caserma Ederle and Del Din Verona Venezia Padova Sud Treviso and the surrounding area Collina dei Camaldoli AFN Naples Power in Naples Naval Base Caserta South Avellino and the highest zones there are interferences Sigonella AFN Sigonella Power in Catania Naval and Air Base North Siracusa and the surrounding area Aviano AFN Aviano Power in Pordenone Aviano Air Base Udine and the surrounding area 66 AFN Italy has been serving Americans that live on American Bases in Pisa Vicenza Aviano Napoli and Sigonella since 1983 Japan edit 648 kHz AM Camp Kinser Urasoe Okinawa 10 kilowatts kW 810 kHz AM Yokota Air Base Western Tokyo 50 kW transmitted from Wakō Saitama Serves the Greater Tokyo Area Station uses the on air ID Eagle 810 1575 kHz AM Marine Corps Air Station Iwakuni Iwakuni Yamaguchi 1 kW Station uses the on air ID Power 1575 Misawa Air Base Misawa Aomori 600 W United States Fleet Activities Sasebo Sasebo Nagasaki 250 W 89 1 MHz FM Kadena Air Base Kadena Okinawa 20 kW Station uses the on air ID Wave 89 US Television channel 11 Camp Foster Okinawa Netherlands edit Radio AFN Soesterberg 1964 1993 former location at grid 52 7 25 N 5 15 13 E Transmissions ceased at the dissolution of USAF 32nd TFS AM AFRS Soesterberg 1140 kHz syndicated 1964 1972 from AFN Bremerhaven 5 kW 67 FM AFN Eagle Radio 93 1 MHz live amp syndicated 1973 1994 from Camp New Amsterdam Soesterberg airbase 0 015 kW 68 The morning Touch and Go show from 5 9 am and the afternoon Afterburner show from 3 6 pm were live The rest of the hours was syndicated from AFN Frankfurt Television AFN Benelux syndicated early 1980s only UHF channel 80 NTSC 69 Currently active radio amp TV 107 9 MHz FM Volkel Air Base AFN Benelux Saudi Arabia edit Table of AFN transmitters in Saudi Arabia Table may be incorrect and incomplete Please correct and expand if necessary FM edit 70 Frequency Power Signal Type City Transmitter site Approximate Geographical Location Channel Name Slogan Genre103 1 MHz 100 W Mono Riyadh Eskan Village Al Kharj Rd 24 34 59 N 46 51 39 E 24 58306 N 46 86083 E 24 58306 46 86083 Voice Channel NPR News News Talkshows Jazz amp Oldies103 9 MHz 100 W Mono Riyadh Eskan Village Al Kharj Rd Mainstream Country Country105 1 MHz 100 W Mono Riyadh Eskan Village Al Kharj Rd Z Rock Alternative rock105 9 MHz 100 W Mono Riyadh Eskan Village Al Kharj Rd Gravity 71 Urban Rhythmic R amp B Pop amp Hip hop 107 9 MHz 100 W Mono Riyadh Eskan Village Al Kharj Rd Hot AC Today s Best Hits Young adult alternative 80 s and 90 s103 1 MHz 21 W Stereo Riyadh Riyadh U S Embassy 24 40 52 N 46 37 13 E 24 68111 N 46 62028 E 24 68111 46 62028 Voice Channel NPR News News Talkshows Jazz amp Oldies105 1 MHz 10 W Stereo Riyadh Riyadh U S Embassy Z Rock Alternative rock107 9 MHz 30 W Stereo Riyadh Riyadh U S Embassy Mainstream Country Country93 7 MHz 250 W Mono Jeddah Jeddah U S Embassy 21 31 33 N 39 09 52 E 21 52583 N 39 16444 E 21 52583 39 16444 Hot AC Today s Best Hits Young adult alternative 80 s and 90 s100 7 MHz 250 W Jeddah Jeddah U S Embassy Voice Channel NPR News News Talkshows Jazz amp Oldies103 9 MHz 50 W Stereo Jeddah Jeddah U S Embassy Jack FM 1980s amp 1990sThe AFN FM Transmitters in Saudi Arabia are managed by the U S military Spain edit Radio AFN Rota Radio The Eagle 102 5 FM Naval Station Rota 5 0 kW 92 1 FM Moron Air Base in Moron de la Frontera Seville 0 015 kW South Korea edit Television edit NOTE All over the air television broadcasts in South Korea ended in May 2012 The following are previous stations Channel 2 VHF Chuncheon Gangwon 100 W Jinhae South Gyeongsang 100 W Channel 12 VHF Daegu North Gyeongsang Camp Walker Camp Henry Camp Carroll 1 kW Channel 19 UHF Paju ri Gyeonggi Channel 34 UHF former Channel 2 VHF Yongsan gu Seoul USAG Yongsan Camp Market K 16 Airbase 30 kW Channel 49 UHF Dongducheon Gyeonggi Camp Red Cloud Camp Casey Camp Stanley 1 kW Munsan Gyeonggi 5 kW Songtan Gyeonggi Osan Air Base USAG Humphreys 1005 W Gunsan North Jeolla Kunsan Air Base and Gwangju 2 5 kW Waegwan North Gyeongsang Camp Carroll South Korea 100 W Channel 58 UHF Uijeongbu Gyeonggi Camp Red Cloud Camp Sears Camp Stanley 100 W Pyeongtaek Gyeonggi USAG Humphreys 100 W Wonju Gangwon 100 W AM Radio Thunder AM edit 1440 kHz Daegu North Gyeongsang Camp Walker Camp Henry Camp Carroll 5 kW Waegwan North Gyeongsang Camp Carroll South Korea 250 W 1161 kHz Uijeongbu Gyeonggi Camp Red Cloud Camp Stanley Camp Jackson 250 W 1197 kHz Dongducheon Gyeonggi Camp Red Cloud Camp Casey Camp Stanley Camp Jackson 1 kW 1260 kHz Busan South Gyeongsang 5 kW 1359 kHz Songtan Gyeonggi Osan Air Base USAG Humphreys 1 kW 1440 kHz Munsan Gyeonggi and Paju ri Gyeonggi 5 kW Chuncheon Gangwon 250 W Pyeongtaek Gyeonggi USAG Humphreys 1 kW Wonju Gangwon 250 W Gunsan North Jeolla Kunsan Air Base 1 kW 1512 kHz Jinhae South Gyeongsang 250 W Pohang North Gyeongsang 250 W Jeju 50 W 1530 kHz Yongsan gu Seoul USAG Yongsan Camp Market K 16 Airbase 5 kW FM Radio AFN Eagle edit 88 1 MHz Busan South Gyeongsang 250 W 88 3 MHz Dongducheon Gyeonggi Camp Red Cloud Camp Casey Camp Stanley 250 W Pyeongtaek Gyeonggi USAG Humphreys 50 W Wonju Gangwon 50 W 88 5 MHz Uijeongbu Gyeonggi Camp Red Cloud Camp Stanley Camp Jackson 100 W Munsan Gyeonggi and Paju ri Gyeonggi 50 W Chuncheon Gangwon 50 W Songtan Gyeonggi Osan Air Base USAG Humphreys 30 W Gunsan North Jeolla Kunsan Air Base 50 W Gwangju South Jeolla 505 W Daegu North Gyeongsang and Waegwan North Gyeongsang Camp Walker Camp Henry Camp Carroll 1 kW Jinhae South Gyeongsang 50 W 102 7 MHz Yongsan gu Seoul USAG Yongsan Camp Market K 16 Airbase 5 kW resource 72 Turkey edit Radio AFN Incirlik The Eagle 1590 AM Incirlik Air Base 5 W 107 1 FM Incirlik Air BaseShortwave USB edit The last known confirmation of AFN using its shortwave frequencies was in the mid 2010s Current 2022 bandscans show no signal on any of AFN s frequencies nbsp QSL card from AFRTSDiego Garcia 12 579 MHz daytime 4 319 MHz nighttime Guam 13 362 MHz daytime 5 765 MHz nighttime Key West Florida 12 1335 MHz day amp night 7 811 MHz day amp night 5 4465 MHz day amp night Pearl Harbor Hawaii 10 32 MHz daytime 6 35 MHz nighttimeSee AFN Shortwave Frequencies 73 See also editChris Noel AFN Berlin British Forces Broadcasting Service Canadian Forces Radio and Television CCTV 7 Channel 5 Thailand DoD News Channel Far East Network Inter Services Public Relations Israel Army Radio Radio Forces Francaises de Berlin Radio Wolga VoyenTV Zvezda TV channel References edit The American Forces Network MilitaryBenefits info 13 June 2019 Retrieved 30 September 2020 Vernon Tom 17 August 2017 AFRTS Celebrates 75th Anniversary Radio and television networks serve American service men and women worldwide radioworld com Future Publishing Limited Retrieved 30 September 2020 a b Historical Summary American Forces Radio and Television Service AFRTS PDF Archived from the original PDF on 20 February 2012 Retrieved 14 March 2012 AFRTS Afrts dodmedia osd mil Archived from the original on 15 December 2009 Retrieved 31 December 2009 Mackenzie Harry 1999 The Directory of the Armed Forces Radio Service Series Viva America for Spanish speaking servicemen Westport CT Greenwood Publishing Group p 21 ISBN 9780313308123 ISBN 0313308128 Bronfman Alejanda Wood Andrew Grant 2012 Media Sound amp Culture in Latin America Pittsburgh PA University of Pittsburgh Press p 49 ISBN 9780822977957 ISBN 978 0822961871 Anthony Edwin D 1973 Records of the Radio Division PDF Records of the Office of Inter American Affairs Vol Inventory of Record Group 229 Washington D C National Archives and Record Services General Services Administration pp 25 26 LCCN 73 600146 Dissonant Divas in Chicana Music The Limits of La Onda Deborah R Vargas University of Minnesota Press Minneapolis 2012 pp 152 155 ISBN 978 0816673162 OCIAA Office of the Coordinator of Inter American Affairs FDR s Good Neighbor Policy CBS Viva America Armed Forces Radio Service and La Cadena de las Americas on google books com German Listening Amerikanischer Soldatensender AFN about com in German and English 2015 Archived from the original on 18 October 2015 Retrieved 22 June 2015 Graeber Stephanie 2010 Der amerikanische Einfluss auf die Rolle des Radios in Nachkriegsbayern in German GRIN Verlag p 73 ISBN 978 3640591619 Retrieved 22 June 2015 Antifascistische oud Verzetsstrijders Nederland Bond van antifascisten Afvn nl Retrieved 22 April 2022 The Directory of the Armed Forces Radio Service Series Harry MacKenzie Greeenwood Press CT 1999 p 198 ISBN 0313308128 Seventh Army Symphony on Armed Forces Radio in 1961 performing works by Vivaldi and Dvorak Kenner James L Musical Ambassadors Soldiers Too Army August 1958 p 60 a b Television Factbook Issues 39 40 Television Digest Inc 1969 A Social History of Iranian Cinema Volume 2 The Industrializing Years 1941 1978 Hamid Naficy Duke University Press 2011 page 46 Journal of the Society of Motion Picture and Television Engineers Volume 77 SMPTE 1968 page 512 Communications and Development Review Volume 1 Issues 1 4 Iran Communications and Development Institute 1977 The Cambridge History of Iran Volume 7 Cambridge University Press 1989 pp 810 811 Iran Almanac and Book of Facts Echo of Iran 1974 page 129 Political Elite of Iran Marvin Zonis Princeton University Press 1976 page 247 Iran 69 An Independent Survey of the Iranian Economy 1969 page 88 Iran Almanac and Book of Facts Volume 16 Echo of Iran 1977 page 125 Jonny 21 October 2017 American Forces Network Radio 1950 2012 archived from the original on 21 December 2021 retrieved 18 November 2017 Bahram9821 11 February 2012 NIRT International Radio retrieved 24 November 2017 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Iran NIRT International Radio on YouTube 11 February 2012 Intermedia Volume 17 International Institute of Communications 1989 page 37 a b AFVN American Forces Vietnam Network Archived from the original on 6 October 2009 Rock Radio Scrapbook AFVN The GI s Companion rockradioscrapbook ca Retrieved 11 October 2022 Engelmann Larry 1990 Tears before the Rain An Oral History of the Fall of South Vietnam Oxford University Press p 372 ISBN 978 0199878925 Retrieved 22 June 2015 AFTN The American Forces Thailand Network aftn net 2015 Retrieved 22 June 2015 Canal 8 cierra el 1 de julio luego de laborar por 50 anos 24 June 1999 El Canal en manos panamenas ha aportado 16 818 millones Metrolibre a b Stars and Stripes European Edition Archives www stripes com Retrieved 11 October 2022 Zitty Volume 18 Issues 23 25 Zitty Verlag GmbH 1994 Medienlandschaft im Umbruch Medien und Kommunikationsatlas Berlin Gunter Bentele Otfried Jarren Ulrich Kratzsch Vistas Verlag 1990 page 260 Korean cable firms to stop AFN broadcasts Stripes com 7 November 2007 Retrieved 31 December 2009 Afnkorea net afnkorea net Archived from the original on 13 December 2014 Retrieved 6 April 2023 Preocupa suspension de licitacion de canal 8 Panama America 28 March 2000 Archived from the original on 29 June 2023 Retrieved 29 June 2023 Gobierno no fija aun precio base del Canal 8 Panama America 25 May 2000 Archived from the original on 29 June 2023 Retrieved 29 June 2023 Gobierno divide en cuatro las frecuencias de canal 8 Panama America 10 August 2000 Archived from the original on 29 June 2023 Retrieved 5 July 2023 Piden que canal 8 sea television educativa Panama America 1 April 2001 Archived from the original on 29 June 2023 Retrieved 29 June 2023 Fijan fecha para licitacion de Canal 8 24 March 2001 Archived from the original on 29 June 2023 Retrieved 29 June 2023 El 10 de julio se licitara la frecuencia del canal 8 26 June 2001 Archived from the original on 29 June 2023 Retrieved 29 June 2023 myAFN Schedule Defense Media Activity 2015 Retrieved 22 June 2015 Stupid AFN 15 March 2018 Retrieved 7 April 2020 Annoying commercials 6 February 2017 Retrieved 7 April 2020 AFN Internet radio service goes global Tuesday Stars and Stripes 29 November 2013 Welcome to AFN Go Internet Radio American Forces Network Europe Radio station stream streamtheworld com Radio station stream streamtheworld com Radio station stream streamtheworld com Radio station stream streamtheworld com Radio station stream streamtheworld com Radio station stream streamtheworld com Radio station stream streamtheworld com Radio station stream streamtheworld com Radio station stream streamtheworld com Radio station stream streamtheworld com Radio station stream streamtheworld com Radio station stream streamtheworld com a b Welcome to AFN Go Internet Radio American Forces Network Pacific Support afn now experience crmforce mil Retrieved 6 April 2023 5th Signal deactivating outdated AFN TV transmitters Kaiserslautern American AdvantiPro GmbH 16 July 2010 Retrieved 7 April 2018 Radio Frequencies American Forces Network Europe American Forces Radio and Television Service AFRTS Retrieved 7 April 2018 Martin Emily R 26 May 2017 Steady Rockin in Fidel s Backyard Joint Task Force Guantanamo Archived from the original on 27 July 2021 Retrieved 26 July 2021 FM DX Italy Ascolti FM e TV a lunga distanza DX Europa Italia 2006 dopo l unione dei database www fmdx altervista org Freewave Nostalgie Freewave Nostalgie Freewave Nostalgie myAFN Affiliates Myafn dodmedia osd mil Retrieved 30 April 2010 permanent dead link myAFN American Forces Network Online myAFN Retrieved 11 October 2022 AFN Viewer s Lounge for Koreans Afn co kr Archived from the original on 14 March 2009 Retrieved 31 December 2009 myAFN American Forces Network Online myafn dodmedia osd mil Retrieved 11 October 2022 Further reading editExternal videos nbsp The Story of American Forces Network AFN The Big Picture YouTube video nbsp 1980 s AFN Special An Inside Look YouTube videoHistory of AFRTS The first 50 years U S Government Printing Office 1993 Patrick Morley This Is the American Forces Network The Anglo American Battle of the Air Waves in World War II Praeger Publishing 2001 Trent Christman Brass Button Broadcasters A Lighthearted Look at Fifty Years of Military Broadcasting Turner Publishing 1992 External links edit nbsp Media related to American Forces Network at Wikimedia Commons Official website nbsp Armed Forces Network Europe at usarmygermany com Armed Forces Network Europe AFN Go AFN Europe Armed Forces Network Pacific AFN Go AFN Pacific AFN Bavaria livestream Portals nbsp Asia nbsp Europe nbsp Radio nbsp Television nbsp United States Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title American Forces Network amp oldid 1200477834, wikipedia, wiki, book, 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