My Experience as an Intern with Iraq Veterans Against the War
This article originally appeared in the 2010 NYU Hagop Kevorkian Center Review.
When I walked in for my first day as an intern with Iraq Veterans Against the War, I had little idea of what to expect. With a background in communications, I had come to the [NYU] Kevorkian Center in hopes of someday helping to educate the American public and affect U.S. foreign policy change in the Middle East through the development of public outreach curricula and PR campaigns for use by non‐profits and NGOs. A marketing internship within the American movement for peace in the Middle East seemed like a good place to start, but veterans seemed far removed from the equation.
I was pleased to find that, despite the crude humor and military mannerisms, IVAW occupies a respected niche in the movement. The national organization of post‐9/11 veterans and active‐duty service members opposes the U.S. wars in and occupations of Iraq and Afghanistan, straddling a wide variety of goals and issues:
• Immediate
withdrawal
of
all
occupying
forces
in
Iraq
and
Afghanistan
• Reparations
for
the
human
and
structural
damages
suffered
by
Iraq
and Afghanistan,
so
that
their
peoples
may
regain
the
right
to
self-determination
• Full
benefits,
adequate
physical
and
mental
healthcare,
and
other
supports
for
returning
servicemen
and
women
As a veterans’ organization, IVAW offers a unique credibility and the potential to reach an audience wider than the traditional peace‐loving left. IVAW co‐founder Tim Goodrich explained, “When the average American hears a veteran—somebody who has seen combat and knows what it means—people listen, more than they do to anyone else, because this is somebody who has been on the ground, knows what the realities are, knows what these things mean.” My job is to help veterans harness their potential through media: I develop educational materials and fact sheets that teach communication skills like talking to reporters, writing op‐eds, and drafting press releases. This approach allows veterans to effectively share their stories in their own, unfiltered voice. The position also encompasses internal communications, sharing news from the national office through audio podcasts, posters and fliers, and social networking websites like Twitter and Facebook.
The value of the IVAW internship program lies in its reciprocity. As a low‐budget non‐ profit, IVAW relies on volunteers to perform roles like communications. My education, experience, and insight into the field helps to satisfy a crucial need for the organization. As a graduate student of Near Eastern Studies, I seek new perspectives from which to study the region. IVAW offers an angle I might never have considered in an academic setting: unabashedly American, but ready to admit its backwardness. IVAW’s attempt to both understand and undermine the institutionalized American stereotypes of Arabs, Muslims, and the Middle East may not qualify as academic, but is essential to changing American attitudes, curbing violent U.S. intervention in the region, and building constructive relationships with Middle Eastern states and peoples. This empirical understanding may prove just as important as anything available in the classroom.