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"Iran End Times Radio" broadcast for whom?
Ask AI · How can background buzzing point to the real controller of a radio station?
Reference News Network April 7 report — According to a report on the website of Russia’s Komsomolskaya Pravda dated April 7, just 12 hours after the United States and Israel began strikes against Iran, a mysterious shortwave radio station with the identifier V32 suddenly started broadcasting.
For more than a month, dozens of the world’s top radio intelligence agencies have been working day and night to figure out its ownership, the purpose of its broadcasts, and its location.
After the station suddenly made an appearance, it was silent for a time, but it became active again in early March and began broadcasting in Persian. On the frequency of 7910 kilohertz, a male voice repeatedly recited “tavajoh” (meaning “pay attention” in Persian), and then began intermittently broadcasting a string of five-digit numbers.
Many experts and conspiracy theorists immediately put forward a brilliant speculation: this is Iran launching its own “doomsday radio,” serving as a backup channel to transmit encrypted instructions to troops if the country’s top leaders die or if the U.S. and Israel bomb all communications centers.
But over time, the matter has become increasingly suspicious: when the “doomsday radio” broadcasters speak Persian, absurd pronunciation errors show up again and again, while Iran itself somehow begins to interfere with this radio station.
So new theories kept coming in. One claim is that the V32 station was produced by a U.S. intelligence agency; the United States is trying to coordinate with Iran’s opposition to incite the public to take to the streets and achieve a change of power in Tehran.
In the background of V32’s broadcasts, sometimes the buzzing signals at 620 hertz and 925 hertz can be heard. Insiders immediately recognized this as the signal sound emitted when a military radio station made by L3Harris Technologies operates in an unencrypted mode. The supply of this type of equipment is strictly controlled, making it unlikely to end up in the hands of Iranian intelligence agencies. A more credible explanation is that the user is the United States or its allies.
Later, an important lead finally emerged, and geolocation cleared away the fog. Amateur radio hobbyists in online communities conducted direction-finding on V32’s signals from different locations and found that this shortwave transmitter is located inside a U.S. military base in Germany’s Burbingen.
They believe that the V32 station is very likely a CIA project, and that all the technical issues of the station were handled by the 52nd Strategic Communications Battalion deployed at that base. (Compiled / Li Ran)