
Dr. Elez Biberaj/
Today marks the 84th anniversary of the Voice of America – an important moment to remember how this preeminent international broadcaster advanced U.S. national interests, projected America’s democratic values, and served hundreds of millions around the world with accurate, independent news and information. For generations, VOA carried truth across borders, countered propaganda, and gave audiences an unfiltered window into America’s democratic discourse and institutions. Its credibility was earned, not inherited, and it became one of the most effective instruments of American soft power.
Yet at a time when the United States confronts formidable global challenges – Russia’s continuing aggression against Ukraine, democratic backsliding across Eurasia, China’s expanding malign influence operations, Iran’s repression, Venezuela’s turmoil, and persistent conflict and instability across the Middle East and Africa – America’s voice has been deliberately silenced. This is not simply a void; it is an open invitation for adversaries to shape narratives, distort facts, and dominate information spaces where VOA once provided clarity, context, and a trusted alternative.
Reviving VOA is a strategic imperative. A nation that cannot communicate credibly forfeits influence to those who weaponize information. Congress has signaled its intent by approving renewed funding for VOA – insufficient, but a foundation on which to rebuild. What is needed now is leadership willing to recognize the damage done and restore an institution that has long and admirably served America’s policies and national interests.
Those guiding U.S. international broadcasting today face a defining choice. The decision to dismantle VOA has weakened America’s reach, undermined its values, and diminished its ability to speak to global audiences with clarity and integrity. Reversing course would not only strengthen America’s voice – it would reaffirm the principles that have anchored VOA for more than eight decades: press freedom, rigorous journalistic standards, editorial independence, and truthful reporting.
Restoring VOA is not merely a correction of a flawed policy. It is a reaffirmation of America’s commitment to openness, accountability, and the free flow of information. History will not remember who presided over its decline. It will remember who had the courage to restore it.
America needs its voice back. And the world needs it even more.