Philippines Leadership and Organization
Figure 13. Areas of Insurgent Organization and Activity, 1989
Source: Based on information from Jose Maria Sison, with
Ranier Werning, The Philippine Revolution: The Leader's View, New
York, 1989, xxii; and Stanley Karnow, In Our Image: America's
Empire in the Philippines, New York, 1989, 429.
The CPP was nominally led by its Central Committee, which in
1989 had some thirty full and nine alternate members. In the
party's decentralized structure, the Central Committee acted as
the highest policy-making body and provided theoretical guidance
to lower echelons. The Central Committee met infrequently,
however, and real power was vested in members of its Political
Bureau. The Political Bureau was thought to have at least nine
members in 1989, but it attempted to meet only once every six
months. Day-to-day decisions were made by a five-member Executive
Committee. In late 1989, the committee included the party's
acting chairman, Benito Tiamzon; Wilma Austria-Tiamzon, his wife;
Ricardo Reyes; Romulo Kintanar; and Jose Maria Sison. Sison, the
CPP's founder, was actively speaking and writing in support of
the revolution while living in self-imposed exile in the
Netherlands. Despite Sison's denials, the military maintained
that he continued to direct the CPP from abroad as its chairman
in absentia.
CPP political and military operations were monitored and
controlled through a system of territorial and functional organs.
Six territorial commissions directed the basic work of party
political cadres and military commanders: Northern Luzon, Central
Luzon, Southern Luzon, Visayas, Mindanao, and Manila-Rizal
(see
fig. 13). In keeping with the CPP's policy of "democratic
centralism," party affairs were managed by committees at echelons
down to village level. Beneath the territorial commissions were
sixteen regional and island party committees, which oversaw
front, district, and section committees. At the bottom of the
CPP's organizational hierarchy were local party branches and
barrio revolutionary committees. In a parallel organization, the
NPA maintained operational commands at each level of the CPP
structure to coordinate the movements' political and military
struggle.
Less was known about the organization and function of the
party's national-level functional commissions, but the existence
of at least three--the National United Front Commission, the
Finance Commission, and the Military Commission--seemed certain
in l990. The Military Commission, whose apparent role was to
direct and coordinate NPA activity, was directed by Executive
Committeemember Romulo Kintanar, who was often described as the
NPA's commander. Establishing, directing, and sustaining party
front groups was the function of the United Front Commission,
which guided the CPP-dominated National Democratic Front and
other political fronts and, through the Middle Forces Department,
the activities involved in pursuing the party's interests in
other areas, such as relations with the Catholic Church. The
CPP's Finance Commission presumably managed taxation, fundraising , and spending. Another organ, the National Organization
Commission, reportedly was to be dissolved, along with the
Manila-Rizal Commission, to form the National Urban Center
Commission in mid-1990.
Data as of June 1991
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