public relations | Council on Foreign Relations | Iraqi Kurdistan | international relations | Public relations | United States Senate Committee on Foreign Relations | International Relations | National Labor Relations Board | Iraqi National Congress | Iraqi Intelligence Service | Iraqi Air Force | Iraqi | Iraqi people | Public Relations | Iraqi no-fly zones | Iraqi Army | International relations | industrial relations | Labor relations | Iraqi Communist Party | Industrial Relations | Indian Council for Cultural Relations | European Journal of International Relations | Object relations theory | National Labor Relations Act | Industrial relations | Graduate School of International Relations and Pacific Studies | Ghana–Russia relations | Cross-Strait relations | Supreme Iraqi Criminal Tribunal |
Nat Kern was a frequent visitor to Iraq during the 1980-1988 Iran-Iraq war, at a time when U.S.-Iraqi relations were improving, and was tasked by the U.S. government with maintaining ties with certain key Iraqi officials from 1991 onwards, at a time when the U.S. government maintained a policy of shunning any official contact with the Iraqi government.