Chief of Staff of the Armed Forces of the Philippines
Chief of Staff of the Armed Forces of the Philippines | |
---|---|
Reports to |
Secretary of National Defense President of the Philippines |
Appointer | The President with the consent of the Commission on Appointments |
Term length | Mandatory retirement at age 56.[2] |
Inaugural holder |
Artemio Ricarte (Revolutionary) Jose Delos Reyes (AFP) |
Formation |
December 21, 1935 (Official) March 22, 1897 (Revolutionary) |
Website | Philippine Armed Forces |
The following is the list of Chiefs of Staff of the Armed Forces of the Philippines. The Armed Forces of the Philippines were created as a result of the December 21, 1935 National Defense Act, Commonwealth Act No. 1.[3] However, the origin of the organization can be traced back to the establishment of the Philippine Constabulary, armed Filipino forces organized in 1901 by the United States to combat the Philippine Revolutionary Forces then led by General Emilio Aguinaldo.
The Chief of Staff of the Armed Forces of the Philippines, usually the only soldier holding a rank of four-star general/admiral is the head of all military forces of the Philippines including all service branches under its command. Its direct equivalent in the United States Armed Forces is the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Unlike his/her United States counterpart which is merely supervisory, the AFP Chief of Staff has operational control over all military personnel of the Armed Forces.
Chiefs of Staff of the AFP
First Republic (1899-1901) | ||||||||||
Chief-of-Staff | Term | Military Branch | Comments | |||||||
General Artemio Ricarte | March 22, 1897 – January 22, 1899 | RA (Revolutionary Army) | Ricarte was elected Captain-General by the Tejeros Convention. | |||||||
General Antonio Luna | January 22, 1899 – June 5, 1899 | RA | Luna was assassinated by General Aguinaldo's men. | |||||||
General Emilio Aguinaldo | June 5, 1899 – March 23, 1901 | RA | Aguinaldo personally took charge after General Antonio Luna's assassination. | |||||||
Commonwealth of the Philippines (1935-1946) | ||||||||||
Major General Jose Delos Reyes | December 15, 1935 – May 6, 1936 | Philippine Army | ||||||||
Major General Paulino Santos | May 4, 1936 – December 31, 1938 | Philippine Army | ||||||||
General of the Army / Field Marshal Douglas MacArthur | July 26, 1941 – June 30, 1946 | United States Armed Forces in the Far East | MacArthur served in Acting Capacity. | |||||||
Major General Basilio Valdez | January 1, 1939 – November 7, 1945 | Philippine Constabulary Philippine Army | ||||||||
Second Republic (Japanese Occupation)[4] | ||||||||||
Third Republic (1946-1971) | ||||||||||
Major General Rafael Jalandoni | December 21, 1945 – December 20, 1948 | Philippine Constabulary Philippine Army | Jalandoni was the first Chief of Staff from the Philippine Constabulary | |||||||
Major General Mariano Castañeda | December 21, 1948 – May 28, 1951 | Philippine Constabulary Philippine Army | ||||||||
Major General Calixto Duque | June 2, 1951 – December 30, 1953 | Philippine Army | ||||||||
Lieutenant General Jesus Vargas | December 31, 1953 – December 29, 1956 | Philippine Army | Vargas is the first military officer to be promoted to Lieutenant General by President Ramon Magsaysay. | |||||||
Lieutenant General Alfonso Arellano | December 29, 1956 – December 31, 1958 | Philippine Army | ||||||||
Lieutenant General Manuel Cabal | January 1, 1959 – December 30, 1961 | Philippine Constabulary | ||||||||
Lieutenant General Pelagio Cruz | December 31, 1961 – August 31, 1962 | Philippine Air Force | Cruz is the first Chief of Staff of the AFP from the Philippine Air Force. | |||||||
General Alfredo Santos | September 1, 1962 – July 12, 1965 | Philippine Army | Santos was the first Filipino four-star general in history, promoted by President Diosdado Macapagal. The first military officer to become chief of staff that came from the ROTC program of the government. | |||||||
General Rigoberto Atienza | July 13, 1965 – January 22, 1966 | Philippine Army | ||||||||
General Ernesto Mata | January 22, 1966 – January 21, 1967 | Philippine Army | During the Marcos regime, especially during its second term, he served as the Secretary of National Defense. | |||||||
General Victor Osias | January 21, 1967 – August 15, 1967 | Philippine Air Force | ||||||||
General Segundo Velasco | August 16, 1967 – May 27, 1968 | Philippine Army | ||||||||
General Manuel T. Yan | May 28, 1968 – January 15, 1972 | Philippine Constabulary | Yan served as the youngest chief of Staff of the Armed Forces of the Philippines at the age of 48. Prior to that, he was the chief of the Philippine Constabulary. He currently holds the record for longest continuous government service from 1937- 2001 or 64 years of service. | |||||||
Third & Fourth Republic (1971-1986) | ||||||||||
General Romeo Espino | January 15, 1972 – August 15, 1981 | Philippine Army | Espino served as the Commanding General of the Philippine Army before appointed to become the top military man. Espino is the longest-serving Chief of Staff of the Armed Forces of the Philippines for nine years, especially during the martial law regime. A second product of the ROTC. During his term, he was fair in administering the military, unlike his successor, General Fabian Ver. | |||||||
General Fabian Ver | August 15, 1981 – October 24, 1984; December 2, 1985 – February 25, 1986 | Philippine Constabulary | Ver was considered a loyalist and the second most powerful man in the country next to President Ferdinand Marcos in the later years of his authoritarian regime, replacing then Defense Secretary Juan Ponce Enrile, who held the status since 1972 when Marcos named him as martial law administrator upon the imposition of martial law. Ver, in fact, was the most powerful military officer at that time for, aside from being the top military man, he was also the commander of the Presidential Security Command and the director-general of NISA, the Marcos regime's secret police. The third military officer appointed as chief of staff that came from ROTC. During his term, he was known for his favoritism especially in the promotion of officers. | |||||||
Fifth Republic (1986–Present) | ||||||||||
General Fidel V. Ramos | October 24, 1984 – December 2, 1985; February 25, 1986 – January 25, 1988 | Philippine Constabulary Philippine Army | Ramos then, before becoming the chief of the now defunct Philippine Constabulary in 1972, he was the commander of Philippine Army's 3rd Division in Cebu. On the 1980s he was promoted into vice-chief of staff with the rank of lieutenant general but remained as PC chief. After the EDSA revolt that ousted Marcos his cousin from power, he became the AFP chief. Later after retiring as AFP chief of staff during the term of President Corazon Aquino served as Secretary of National Defense and was elected President of the Philippines in 1992 and served until 1998. | |||||||
General Renato De Villa | January 25, 1988 – January 23, 1991 | Philippine Constabulary | Prior to becoming chief of staff, in 1986, De Villa was named to be the chief of the Philippine Constabulary (now defunct), then an AFP major service acting as the country's police force while he was also named to be AFP vice-chief of staff with the rank of three-star general. Upon retirement, De Villa served as Secretary of National Defense when he retired in 1991 and ran for president but lost to Joseph Estrada and Executive Secretary under President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo. | |||||||
General Rodolfo Biazon | January 24, 1991 – April 12, 1991 | Philippine Marine Corps | Biazon served in the Philippine Senate and the House of Representatives after his retirement as AFP chief of staff in 1991. He is the first and only Chief of Staff from the PMC. Prior to that, he served as the commander of the AFP NCR Defense Command in 1988 and Commandant of the Philippine Marine Corps in 1987. He had also served as the superintendent of the Philippine Military Academy in 1986. | |||||||
General Lisandro Abadia | April 12, 1991 – April 12, 1994 | Philippine Army | ||||||||
General Arturo Enrile | April 12, 1994 – November 28, 1996 | Philippine Army | Enrile later served as Secretary of the DOTC under President Fidel Ramos. | |||||||
General Arnulfo Acedera | November 28, 1996 – December 31, 1997 | Philippine Air Force | Second chief of staff to come from the Philippine Air Force | |||||||
General Clemente Mariano | January 1, 1998 – July 1, 1998 | Philippine Army | ||||||||
General Joselino Nazareno | July 1, 1998 – July 8, 1999 | Philippine Army | Later served as Ambassador to Pakistan | |||||||
General Angelo Reyes | July 8, 1999 – March 17, 2001 | Philippine Army | Reyes later served as Secretary of National Defense, Secretary of DILG, Secretary of DENR, and Secretary of DOE under President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo. | |||||||
General Diomedio Villanueva | March 17, 2001 – May 18, 2002 | Philippine Army | ||||||||
General Roy Cimatu | May 18, 2002 – September 10, 2002 | Philippine Army | Cimatu later served as Special Envoy to the Middle East. | |||||||
General Benjamin Defensor Jr. | September 10, 2002 – November 28, 2002 | Philippine Air Force | The third AFP chief of staff from the Philippine Air Force. | |||||||
General Dionisio Santiago | November 28, 2002 – April 8, 2003 | Philippine Army | Later served as the director-general of the Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency. | |||||||
General Narciso Abaya | April 8, 2003 – October 29, 2004 | Philippine Army | ||||||||
General Efren Abu | October 29, 2004 – August 15, 2005 | Philippine Army | ||||||||
General Generoso Senga | August 15, 2005 – July 22, 2006 | Philippine Army | ||||||||
General Hermogenes Esperon Jr. | July 22, 2006 – May 12, 2008 | Philippine Army | Esperon later served as Presidential Adviser on Peace Process under President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo. | |||||||
General Alexander Yano | May 12, 2008 – May 1, 2009 | Philippine Army | Yano was the first general to be born in Mindanao and later served as our country's Ambassador to Brunei. | |||||||
General Victor Ibrado | May 1, 2009 – March 10, 2010 | Philippine Army | ||||||||
General Delfin N. Bangit | March 10, 2010 – June 22, 2010 | Philippine Army | ||||||||
Lieutenant General Nestor Ochoa | June 22, 2010 – July 2, 2010 | Philippine Army | Ochoa served as AFP Chief-of-Staff in Acting Capacity. | |||||||
General Ricardo David | July 2, 2010 – March 7, 2011 | Philippine Army | David later served as Bureau of Immigration Commissioner under President Benigno Aquino III. | |||||||
General Eduardo Oban Jr. | March 7, 2011 – December 12, 2011 | Philippine Air Force | ||||||||
General Jessie Dellosa | December 12, 2011 – January 20, 2013 | Philippine Army | ||||||||
General Emmanuel T. Bautista | January 20, 2013 – July 18, 2014 | Philippine Army | ||||||||
General Gregorio Pio Catapang | July 18, 2014 – July 10, 2015 | Philippine Army | Catapang is the only RAM member to become Chief of Staff. Later served as Bases Conversion Development Agency Board Member | |||||||
General Hernando Delfin Carmelo A. Iriberri | July 10, 2015 – April 22, 2016 | Philippine Army | ||||||||
Lieutenant General Glorioso Miranda | April 22, 2016 – July 1, 2016 | Philippine Army | Serves in an acting capacity.[2] | |||||||
General Ricardo Visaya | July 1, 2016 – present | Philippine Army | [1] |
References
- 1 2 "Duterte leads AFP change of command rites". Sun.Star Manila. 1 July 2016. Retrieved 1 July 2016.
- 1 2 "Gen. Glorioso Miranda named as acting AFP chief". CNN Philippines. 22 April 2016. Retrieved 1 July 2016.
- ↑ COMMONWEALTH ACT NO. 1: The National Defense Act, Chanrobles law library, December 21, 1935, retrieved 2008-10-24
- ↑ During the Japanese Occupation, the Philippine military power is in the hands of the Japanese Imperial Army.