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US Army colonel [Kizirian] to be laid to rest

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  • US Army colonel [Kizirian] to be laid to rest

    Florida Today, FL
    March 11 2006

    Army colonel to be laid to rest

    BY RICK NEALE
    FLORIDA TODAY


    MELBOURNE - A decorated U.S. Army intelligence officer whose portrait
    hangs in the Hawaii Army Museum Gallery of Heroes will be
    memorialized during a funeral this morning in Melbourne.

    Col. John Kizirian, 77, died Feb. 26 after a brief illness at Holmes
    Regional Medical Center. He fought nine battle campaigns in Korea and
    Vietnam, earning dozens of medals and accolades for battlefield
    bravery and behind-the-scenes brainpower far from the theater of
    operation, family members said.

    Kizirian spoke fluent Armenian -- his parents were immigrants -- plus
    Persian, Indonesian, Spanish and English.

    He was awarded a Distinguished Service Cross for "extraordinary
    heroism and devotion to duty" during a prolonged May 1967 firefight
    against Viet Cong forces, according to information provided by museum
    curator Judy Bowman.

    Family members say he helped predict the Tet Offensive, the
    wide-ranging 1968 attack by North Vietnamese forces, by reporting the
    massing of enemy troops in the vicinity.

    "My three brothers were looking through this, and they were crying
    because of all the lives that Jonathan saved," said his wife, Carol
    Kizirian, fighting back tears and flipping through a thick file
    folder of military photographs and documents. "I didn't even know. He
    was very modest, and he didn't talk about those things."

    The funeral service takes place at 11 a.m. today at St. Paul's
    Anglican Church, 7200 N. Wickham Road, Melbourne. He will be buried
    March 24 in Arlington National Cemetery, Carol said.

    Kizirian's niece, Lesley Kissick of Montara, Calif., believes he
    should receive the Congressional Medal of Honor. Last August, she
    wrote a letter to U.S. Rep. Dave Weldon, R-Indialantic, asking for
    legislative help on her uncle's behalf.

    "I really wish it would have happened when he was alive," Kissick
    said of the accolade. "But posthumously is OK."

    Weldon's press secretary, Jaillene Hunter, said family members must
    first sign a privacy waiver before background research can begin.
    Kissick said she will contact Weldon's office to do so.

    Kizirian grew up in Whitinsville, Mass., where he became the tiny
    city's first-ever Eagle Scout. He quit high school during his junior
    year and joined the military at age 17, right at the tail end of
    World War II, according to a transcript of a 1993 interview provided
    by his wife.

    He retired from the Army in 1975 but returned to active duty in 1980,
    serving as a defense official in the U.S. Embassy in
    Jakarta-Indonesia. He retired for good in 1984. Then-Secretary of
    Defense Alexander Haig later offered Kizirian a high-level defense
    department job, but he declined the post so that he could care for
    his ailing wife, Edith, his obituary states.

    After Edith's death, Kizirian moved from Hawaii to Melbourne seven
    years ago. He asked Carol to the movies, they dated and then married
    in May 2001, she said.

    Kizirian commanded authority, even when socializing at the Eau Gallie
    Yacht Club. Carol recalled how, when necessary, he spoke in "his
    booming colonel voice that would scare the beejeebies out of anyone."

    But she also said he had a tender, loving side. An avid boater, he
    enjoyed flying, storytelling and collecting ornate objects from
    around the world.

    Photo: Hero. In this 2000 family photo, Col. John Kizirian stands
    next to his own portrait in the Hawaii Army Museum Gallery of Heroes.
    Kizirian fought nine battle campaigns in Korea and Vietnam, earning
    dozens of medals. For FLORIDA TODAY

    http://www.floridatoday.com/apps/pbcs.dll/articl e?AID=/20060311/NEWS01/603110318/1006
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