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  • From Iraq tour of duty to the RNC

    MetroWestDailyNews.com

    >From Iraq tour of duty to the RNC

    By Michael Kunzelman / News Staff Writer
    Wednesday, August 11, 2004

    ASHLAND -- When John Merguerian returned home to Ashland from a yearlong
    tour of duty in Iraq, many of his friends and neighbors assumed the war and
    its horrors had left him with a bitter taste in his mouth.
    They could not have been more wrong.
    Merguerian, an Army reservist who served as an Arabic linguist in a
    civil affairs battalion, said countless Iraqis told him in their native
    tongue that their life is much better since the fall of Saddam Hussein's
    regime.
    "Life is still tough for these Iraqis, but, that said, at least they
    have some freedom now," he said. "I feel we've done some good. There are
    some positive things going on over there."
    Not only does Merguerian support the war, but he also looks forward to
    playing a small part in trying to re-elect his commander in chief. The
    30-year-old is heading to New York City this month to serve as an alternate
    delegate at the Republican National Convention in New York City.
    "I wanted to give the public a different perspective on the war in
    Iraq," he said.
    Merguerian was recruited by Robert Semonian, a member of the
    Massachusetts Republican State Committee. They both attend St. James
    Armenian Church in Watertown.
    "I felt that he would have an important message to give people, as
    someone who served in Iraq," Semonian explained. "He's a young person, very
    articulate, honest and straight-forward."
    Merguerian, a 1992 graduate of Ashland High School, became active in
    Republican politics and volunteered for several GOP campaigns while he
    attended the University of California at Los Angeles, where he majored in
    Arabic and Middle Eastern political science.
    When he enlisted in the Army in 1997, his language skills quickly made
    him a valuable asset. In Iraq, he served in the security intelligence
    section of the civil affairs battalion.
    He performed a wide range of tasks, "everything from doing humanitarian
    work to collecting intelligence," he said.
    Merguerian admitted to being scared when he arrived in Iraq in April
    2003 during a phase of the war he describes as the "looting period."
    "Everything was out of control," he said. "Conditions weren't good. We
    didn't know what was going to happen."
    But Merguerian said he always enjoyed his work with the Iraqi people, a
    statement that often surprises his friends and neighbors.
    "They said the media portrayed the war as posing a constant threat of
    violence for the troops, with no diplomacy or communication between the
    Americans and the people in the neighborhoods," he recalled.
    Merguerian said many of the younger soldiers, especially those whose
    tours of duty have been extended, are "very upset with the Bush
    administration."
    But he has no qualms about supporting Bush over John Kerry.
    "When I listened to Kerry's speech (at the Democratic National
    Convention), I didn't hear him lay down a plan for what he wants to do
    post-war in Iraq," Merguerian said.
    Merguerian's father, Haig, is proud of his son's war service. But he
    cannot say the same about his son's Republican credentials.
    "He's on the other side," he said with a laugh.
    A strong Kerry supporter, Haig Merguerian has been a registered
    Democrat ever since immigrated to the United States from Armenia in 1967.
    "I don't know why he's still supporting the Republicans," Haig
    Merguerian said. "But I'm not going to tell him not to go (to the
    convention). He can do whatever he wants."
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