Precisely!
In fact, yoostuhbee VOA via Delano hit the Best Coast with so much RF it could easily be received on a portable receiver (like a DX375) at mid-day..... with the aerial down. It had such a clear signal on 9 MHz that it sounded like one of my local MW flamethrowers, e.g. KEX. In retrospect it's hard to believe they *weren't* indirectly broadcasting to a domestic audience -- never mind Smith-Mundt, this was post-cold war, after all.
I really can't help but feel a little pity for a buddy of mine who's big into radio communications, especially shortwave. He's fascinated with it, yet he'll never be able to experience shortwave the way we did when the band was relatively crowded (well, more than today) with big international broadcasters like the eastern European ones, BBC, VOA, Radio Australia, and even the pseudo-non-domestics like the rock and roll station KTBN had been prior. Not almost exclusively data bursts, dollah-a-hollah bible thumpers, WWV and old hammies banging on about their antennas, health problems and far-right political ideology. And it's not through any fault of his, either - he's only in his mid-20s, so was just coming of age when it was already in severe decline. These days DXing shortwave via North America is still possible but for the most part it's really, really boring.