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Alumnus Says Activism Requires Courage

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Former intelligence officer Ray McGovern (FCRH ’61, GSAS ’62) calls on students in the Peace and Justice Studies Program to fight injustice. Photo by Ken Levinson

Former intelligence officer Ray McGovern (FCRH ’61, GSAS ’62) calls on students in the Peace and Justice Studies Program to fight injustice.
Photo by Ken Levinson

A former CIA intelligence analyst, antiwar activist and Fordham University alumnus urged graduating students in the Peace and Justice Studies Program to follow their consciences when they see injustice, reminding them that to do so often requires courage and risk.

Ray McGovern (FCRH ’61, GSAS ’62), co-founder of Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity (VIPS), and a CIA analyst for 27 years, called the Bush administration’s justification for the Iraq war “95 percent charade” and warned against the loss of constitutional rights through a censored press and lethargic public.

“The cardinal sin in intelligence work is to fix the intelligence to suit the policy,” he said, referring to the Bush administration’s efforts to portray Saddam Hussein as harboring weapons of mass destruction. “They were trying to justify the unjustifiable—the Iraq war. Peace is nothing more than the experience of justice, and you can’t have justice without truth. We can change things, but it requires sticking our necks out.”

Saying that he was “grateful for the faith tradition from which I come,” the Bronx-born McGovern praised his Jesuit education at both Fordham Preparatory School and the University.
McGovern graduated summa cum laude with a master’s degree in Russian studies and served two years in the U.S. Army as an infantry and intelligence officer before moving to the CIA. McGovern’s duties included chairing National Intelligence Estimates and preparing the President’s Daily Brief.

“I worked under nine [CIA] directors,” he said. “It was possible [then]to seek the truth and then speak the truth to power, and most of them had the integrity to speak. Now, that word accountable, it has been banned in Washington, D.C.”

McGovern co-founded VIPS in 2003, when there was evidence that intelligence analysis was being inappropriately manipulated by the Bush administration to justify the invasion of Iraq. The group consists of 61 former professionals from the CIA, FBI, National Security Agency and other U.S. intelligence agencies.

– Janet Sassi

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