WASHINGTON — In early 2024, Spokane Valley native and retired diplomat Ryan Crocker knew the U.S.-funded, Arabic-language news organization he had championed for years needed help.
Twenty years after the Middle East Broadcasting Networks were created to counter anti-American bias that Congress and the George W. Bush administration saw in the Arab world, the editorially independent news outlet was flagging amid unstable leadership and criticism of its coverage. As chairman of MBN’s board, Crocker, whose storied career in the foreign service led Bush to dub him “America’s Lawrence of Arabia,” recruited Jeffrey Gedmin to take over as CEO and right the ship.
On April 12, after leading a yearlong overhaul that earned the support of even some of MBN’s critics, Gedmin was forced to lay off more than 90% of the broadcaster’s staff after Kari Lake, a former TV news anchor tapped by President Donald Trump to remake the U.S. Agency for Global Media, terminated the grants that fund MBN and other grantees, including Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty and Radio Free Asia.
In an email to staff announcing the layoffs, Gedmin wrote that Lake had refused to talk with him after cutting the funding.