3rd Marine Aircraft Wing
CAMP LEATHERNECK, Afghanistan, May 24,
2012 – Two Marines with Marine Wing Support Squadron 273 reached a turning
point in their lives before deploying to Afghanistan.
Staff Sgt. Jason Constable, a watch
officer and combat engineer, and Sgt. Jose Guadarramapedraza, an administration
specialist, are now citizens of the United States.
“I’ve always felt like I was an
American,” said Constable, a native of New Zealand.
Constable said he came to the United
States in 1985 and completed his sophomore year in high school after having
stayed in the country for four years. He returned in 1991 and became a security
guard at a hospital in Phoenix before joining the Marine Corps in 1993.
“My father wanted me to join the French
Foreign Legion,” he said. Instead, Constable sought his friends’ opinions on
what the hardest option would be to serve in the U.S. military. His friends
told him it was the Marine Corps.
Constable enlisted in 1993 and left the
Corps when his enlistment ended four years later.
“I lived a pretty uneventful seven years
after that,” he said. “After I got out, it just wasn’t the same.”
Constable said he missed the camaraderie
and his sense of belonging and having a purpose in life. After the 9/11
attacks, he said, he felt a resurgence in patriotism and re-enlisted in 2004.
In 2005, he deployed to Iraq, where he earned a Purple Heart after being
injured when his vehicle hit a roadside bomb.
Constable said he wanted to earn his
citizenship, and he also needed it to perform his duties. “I started needing
clearances that I couldn’t get because I wasn’t a citizen,” he explained. He
took his citizenship oath hours before he deployed to Afghanistan.
Guadarramapedraza migrated to Idaho from
central Mexico with his family of 11. He grew up in Mountain Home and enlisted
in the Marine Corps in 2004. He said he had permanent residency before he
joined, but that not being a citizen began to hamper his ability to carry out
day-to-day activities at work.
“I can do my job easier and not have
headaches from having to renew my green card and not be able to do certain
tasks with my job,” he said. “It’s a huge relief.”
Guadarramapedraza said gaining his
citizenship has opened new avenues for him at work. As an administrative
specialist, he ensures squadron personnel are paid their entitlements and
receive their awards. The new clearances allow him to access secure networks
while he’s deployed.
“I felt proud,” he said. “It was the
right thing to do for my family and the Marine Corps. In order to do my job and
be proficient and support my Marines, I needed my citizenship,” he said.
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