Philippines Organization and Training
Figure 10. Organization of the Armed Forces of the Philippines
(AFP), 1989
Source: Based on information from United States, Allied Army
Training Study of the Republic of the Philippines, Fort Monroe,
Virginia, 1989, 60.
The 1987 constitution mandates civilian control of the
military and establishes the president as commander in chief of
the armed forces. The president also heads the National Security
Council, ostensibly the policy-making and advisory body for
matters connected with national defense. President Aquino
reestablished the council in 1986 through an executive order that
provided for a National Security Council director to advise the
president on national security matters and for a National
Security Council Secretariat. The council itself is composed of
the president and at least nine others: the vice president; the
AFP chief of staff; National Security Council director; the
executive secretary; and the secretaries of foreign affairs,
national defense, interior and local government, justice, and
labor and employment (called ministers before 1987). By the end
of 1990, however, the National Security Council had only convened
twice.
Much of the real authority for policy development appeared to
reside with a smaller cabinet group that met more frequently. A
cabinet Cluster for Political and Security Affairs, known as
Cluster E, routinely advised the president on national security
matters. Cluster E membership was more limited, but included key
members of the National Security Council, such as its director
and the secretaries of national defense, foreign affairs,
justice, and finance.
Responsibility for national security was vested in the
Department of National Defense. The principal functions of the
department in 1991 were to defend the state against internal and
external threats and, through the Philippine National Police, to
maintain law and order. A broad interpretation of these roles
historically has involved the department in national development
tasks, including civic action, to address the causes for internal
unrest. The secretary of national defense, by law a civilian, was
charged with advising the president on defense matters and
developing defense policy.
Authority over the AFP's four services was vested in the
chief of staff, a general. The chief of staff exercised command
through the General Headquarters, which was located with the
Department of National Defense in Manila's Camp Aguinaldo.
Immediately subordinate to him was the vice chief of staff, a
lieutenant general, and the deputy chief of staff, a major
general who was the military's chief administrator. The General
Headquarters was staffed with a coordinating staff, J-1 through
J-9, and a special staff. Coordinating staff officers included
deputies for personnel, intelligence, operations, logistics,
plans, comptroller, civil-military operations, and education and
training. Also subordinate to the chief of staff were the various
specified and support commands and area unified commands
(see
fig. 10).
Throughout the country, the regionally based area unified
commands exercised operational control over AFP units of all
services deployed in their regions. AFP General Headquarters
created six area commands in 1987 and 1988 by combining the
thirteen regional unified commands that had been formed in 1983.
Area command boundaries were defined by the country's numbered
political regions
(see
fig. 9). Northern Luzon Command
incorporated regions 1, 2 and 3; Southern Luzon Command
encompassed region 4 (except Palawan) and region 5; Visayas
Command covered the Visayan Islands in regions 6, 7, and 8; and
Southern Command incorporated the island of Mindanao and the Sulu
Archipelago, regions 9 through 12. The AFP's Western Command was
responsible for the province of Palawan (part of region 4) and
for Philippine claims in the Spratly Islands. The sixth area
command, the National Capital Region Command, had operational
control over military units in metropolitan Manila. Area
commanders directed counterinsurgency operations in their
respective areas, but support functions--such as training and
logistics--were left to the military support services and joint
commands such as the AFP's Logistics Command and Training
Command.
The armed forces maintained several military training
institutions in 1991. Foremost among these was the Philippine
Military Academy, founded in 1905 to train Filipino officers for
the Philippine Constabulary. Located at Fort del Pilar, Baguio,
the academy trained future officers of all four services. Male
cadets between the ages of seventeen and twenty-three were
selected through a highly competitive examination for a four-year
course, patterned on the United States Military Academy, leading
to a bachelor of science degree and an officer's commission.
Attrition took a heavy toll. Only about 100 of the 400 cadets
admitted each year completed the course. Graduates were given
their choice of service within established quota limits, with
preference given to those with the highest class standing. The
Philippine Constabulary was most often a cadet's first choice,
reflecting the potential for developing supplementary income and
local influence that came with the job. Officers assigned to the
navy and air force usually attended orientation courses before
being assigned to their units.
Reserve officers were trained under the Citizen Military
Training system, formerly known as the Reserve Officer Training
Corps. Basic military training under this system was mandatory
for all high school students. Male college students were required
to take additional basic training and had the option of advanced
training leading to a reserve officer's commission. A small
number of Citizen Military Training graduates were integrated
into the regular officer corps. Women were commissioned into the
Women's Auxiliary Corps of one of the services following training
at selected universities.
Officer Candidate School was a third source of commissions.
Candidates were required to have a bachelor's degree and were
accepted from the enlisted ranks and the civilian sector. In the
late l980s, women were admitted with men to this one-year program
taught at the AFP's Training Command at Camp Capinpin, near
Manila, in Rizal Province.
Career training for officers was patterned after that in the
United States. The AFP's Command and General Staff College
prepared officers of all services for command, staff, and
managerial positions normally assigned to field-grade officers.
Only 25 percent of mid-grade officers were chosen to attend the
eight-month cause at Fort Bonifacio in Manila. The National
Defense College, also at Fort Bonifacio, was the military's
senior education institution. A select group of senior officers
and government officials attended a course given each year at the
college and received master's degrees in national security
administration. The curriculum was designed to provide the broad
perspective necessary for national policy making.
Acknowledging systemic weaknesses, the AFP undertook several
programs to upgrade training in the late 1980s. To improve
management of the training system, training staffs were
established in the AFP's General Headquarters and added to
service and unified command staffs in 1988. The Training Command
was organized at Camp Capinpin. In addition to conducting a
variety of training for enlisted personnel, noncommissioned
officers (NCOs), and officers, the Training Command was charged
with developing instruction and standardizing common training
among the services.
Data as of June 1991
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