The International Organization of Journalists (IOJ, French: Organisation internationale des journalistes) was an international press workers' organization based in Prague, Czechoslovakia, during the Cold War. It was one of dozens of front organizations launched by the Soviet Union in the late 1940s and early 1950s.[1][2] It was controlled in Prague by the Central Committee of the Czechoslovak Communist Party, with the assistance of KGB agents.[3] It was described by the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency as "an instrumentality of Soviet propaganda".[4]
History
The International Organization of Journalists was formed at a congress held in Copenhagen in June 1946. At this meeting, the International Federation of Journalists and the International Federation of Journalists of the Allied and Free Countries merged into the new organization and for a time the new organization was broadly representative of the journalists of the world. However, by 1950 the IOJ had become dominated by communists and the non-communist member organizations had withdrawn. These would re-launch the International Federation of Journalists in 1952.[5]
A declassified Central Intelligence Agency document from 1955, described the IOJ as "an instrumentality of Soviet propaganda".[4] In a 2009 interview with the newspaper Helsingin Sanomat, the Finnish professor Kaarle Nordenstreng who was the chairman of the IOJ 1976–1990, acknowledged that they took orders from the Kremlin but maintained that their operations were far from straightforwardly following their directives.[6]
Organization
The decision-making body of the IOJ was Congress, which met every four years. Members of the IOJ, and delegations representing groups that had less than 20 members, had a voice, but no vote in the deliberation. Congress elected the Executive Committee, whose members could be nominated either by member federations or by the Congress itself. The Executive Committee met once a year. The IOJ Bureau was also elected by the Congress and consisted of the President, Secretary-General and a number of Vice-Presidents and met as required. Members of the Bureau were ex-officio members of the Executive Committee. The General Secretariat handled day-to-day administration of the IOJ and was headed by the General Secretary under the direction of the Bureau.[7] Originally headquartered in London, in June 1947, the IOJ moved to Opletalova 5, PragueII, [8] and in 1966, to Vinohradska 3, Prague 1,[9] and by 1978, to Parizska 9, 11001 Prague 1.[10]
The IOJ published a monthly The Democratic Journalist in English, French, Spanish, German and Russian.[17] Other publications included Interpressgrafik, Journalists' affairs and Afrique mass media.[18]
^Jeffrey T. Richelson (1997). A century of spies: intelligence in the twentieth century. p. 252.
^Ralph And Brown Fred R. Sanders (2008). National Security Management: Global Psychological Conflict. p. 31.
^Political posters in Central and Eastern Europe, 1945-95: signs of the times. James Aulich, Marta Sylvestrová. p. 66
^ abHettena, Seth (2020-03-09). "Is Zero Hedge a Russian Trojan Horse?". The New Republic. ISSN0028-6583. Retrieved 2020-03-09. Ivandjiiski also proudly informed me of his membership, since 1974, in the International Organization of Journalists, a front organization that a declassified CIA study described as 'an instrumentality of Soviet propaganda.'