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Intelsat General (IGC) Again Selected to Deliver
Radio and Television Programming to U.S. Troops Worldwide
April 24,
2018
Intelsat General announced
that the Company will distribute television and radio programming to U.S.
servicemen and women stationed around the world, working with the support of
three other satellite and ground service providers.
Intelsat General has been
carrying the global satellite feed for the American Forces Network (AFN) for
more than 15 years, bringing U.S. troops on land and at sea a wide variety
of television and radio programming. The new one-year contract with four
renewable option years will involve six satellites and five teleports at
various locations around the globe, as well as the IntelsatOne terrestrial
fiber network. The other partners involved in providing the service are SES
Government Solutions, Korea Telecom and Allen Communications.
“We have been supporting the
American Forces Network for a number of years and this new contract will
allow us to continue to distribute programming that is so important to the
morale of our troops at home, at sea and abroad,” said Rick Henry, VP of
Sales and Marketing for Intelsat General. “Our globalized network enables
AFN programming to reach more than one million service men and women
stationed in the most remote areas of the globe, allowing them to feel
closer to home whether they are watching an NFL football game or an episode
of a television series.”
The AFN will provide
Intelsat General with three data streams for distribution globally, using
uplink teleports in California and Maryland in the United States as well as
South Korea and Germany. Intelsat will distribute the AFN programming to
ships at sea and fixed military bases in the Atlantic Ocean Region, the
Indian Ocean Region, and the Continental U.S., Greenland, Central America
and Cuba.
The American Forces Network,
based at Fort Meade in Maryland, traces its origins to a single Army radio
station established in Kodiak, Alaska, to entertain isolated soldiers at the
beginning of World War II. It has since grown to provide a wide range of
around-the-clock radio and television programming from a variety of
commercial sources, giving U.S. troops worldwide the same access to news,
sports and entertainment that they might enjoy at home.
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