Military Wiki
1989 Philippine coup attempt
DateDecember 1–9, 1989
LocationVillamor Airbase, Camp Crame, Fort Bonifacio, Cavite Naval Base (Philippine Navy), Sangley Point Air Base (Philippine Air Force), Mactan Airbase, Cebu, Malacañan Palace and portions of Makati, Manila, Quezon City around Metropolis and Camp Aguinaldo
Result

Philippine government victory

  • Coup crushed by US intervention
  • Creation of the Davide Fact-Finding Commission
  • Arrest of Honasan and coup plotters, financiers and leaders but some were given amnesty later on
  • Marcos remains exiled in Hawaii until his remains returned to Philippines in 1991
Belligerents
Flag of the Philippines (navy blue) Philippine Republic
United States
Philippines Pro-Aquino protesters
Flag of the Vatican City (2 by 3) Archdiocese of Manila
War Flag of the Philippines (navy blue) RAM Movement
Commanders and leaders
Philippines Corazon Aquino
Flag of the Philippines (navy blue) Fidel Ramos
Flag of the Philippines (navy blue) Renato De Villa
Flag of the Vatican City (2 by 3) Jaime Cardinal Sin
United States George H. W. Bush
Flag of the United States Bernard John Smith
Flag of the United States Harry Rittenour
War Flag of the Philippines (navy blue) Gregorio Honasan
War Flag of the Philippines (navy blue) Edgardo Abenina
War Flag of the Philippines (navy blue) Jose Zumel
Military support
Flag of the Armed Forces of the Philippines Armed Forces of the Philippines
Military flag of the United States United States Armed Forces
War Flag of the Philippines (navy blue) RAM Loyalists from the AFP

The most serious attempted coup d'état against the government of Philippine President Corazon Aquino was staged beginning December 1, 1989, by members of the Armed Forces of the Philippines belonging to the Reform the Armed Forces Movement (RAM) and soldiers loyal to former President Ferdinand Marcos. Metro Manila was shaken by this Christmas-time coup, which almost seized the Malacañang Palace. It was completely defeated by the Philippine government by December 9, 1989.

Background[]

Philippine politics between 1986 and 1991 was punctuated by Aquino's desperate struggle to survive physically and politically a succession of coup attempts, culminating in a large, bloody, and well-financed attempt in December 1989. This attempt involved upwards of 3,000 troops, including elite Scout Rangers and marines, in a coordinated series of attacks on Camp Crame and Camp Aquinaldo, Fort Bonifacio, Cavite Naval Base, Villamor Air Base, and on Malacañan Palace itself, which was dive-bombed by vintage T-28 aircraft. Although Aquino was not hurt in this raid, the situation appeared desperate, for not only were military commanders around the country waiting to see which side would triumph in Manila, but the people of Manila, who had poured into the streets to protect Aquino in February 1986, stayed home this time.[1]

Coup[]

The coup was led by military officers, including Lt. Colonel Gregorio Honasan, General Edgardo Abenina, and retired General Jose Ma. Zumel, and staged by an alliance of the RAM, led by Honasan, and Zumel.[2] At the onset of the coup, the rebels seized Villamor Airbase, Fort Bonifacio, Sangley Airbase, Mactan Airbase in Cebu, and portions of Camp Aguinaldo. The rebels set patrols around the runway of Ninoy Aquino International Airport effectively shutting it down.[3] From Sangley Airbase, the rebels launched planes and helicopters which bombarded and strafed Malacañan Palace, Camp Crame and Camp Aguinaldo.[4] Three hours after the fall of Villamor Air Base, Aquino went on air to address her people, and said that "We shall smash this naked attempt once more". At that point the government counterattack began. Seven army trucks headed for Channel 4, and fierce fighting occurred there. Ramos and Renato de Villa monitored the crises from Camp Crame, the Constabulary headquarters. With loyal forces hard-pressed by the rebels, Aquino requested U.S. military assistance, at the behest of her military commanders, and it was granted. 120 marines, part of an 800-strong U.S. contingent stationed at Subic Naval Base, were deployed at the grounds of the U.S. Embassy as a defensive measure. President Aquino stated that the loyal forces lacked the ability to contain the rebel forces. American help was crucial to the Aquino cause, clearing the skies of rebel aircraft and allowing loyalists to consolidate their forces. While many mutineers surrendered, Aquino declared: "We leave them two choices; Surrender or die". Government F-5 jets sortied and challenged rebel planes culminating in the destruction of the rebel T-28 Trojans. Government forces recaptured all military bases save for Mactan Airbase by December 3, but rebel forces retreating from Fort Bonifacio occupied 22 high-rise buildings along the Ayala business area in Makati.[5] The government claimed the coup was crushed, but fierce fighting continued through the weekend, with Camp Aguinaldo set ablaze by the rebel howitzers. The occupation of Makati lasted until December 7, while the rebels surrendered Mactan Airbase on December 9.[4] The official casualty toll was 99 dead (including 50 civilians) and 570 wounded.[6]

The United States military supported the Aquino government during this coup. Operation "Classic Resolve" involved the use of US airpower from the aircraft carriers USS Midway and USS Enterprise and F-4 Phantom II fighters from Clark Air Base. The United States Air Force jets retook the skies for Aquino. The US planes had clearance to "...buzz the rebel planes at their base, fire in front of them if any attempted to take off, and shoot them down if they did".[citation needed]

American involvement[]

Aquino found it necessary to request United States support to put down this uprising.[7] Then Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff General Colin Powell recalled Aquino calling the White House and asking for the USAF to bomb a nearby air base to prevent the aircraft from attacking the Malacañang Palace. Powell and Admiral Huntington Hardisty instead decided to instruct US F-4 pilots to take off from Clark Air Base and buzz the mutinous air base in a manner that demonstrated "extreme hostile intent," with further instructions to shoot down any planes that did takeoff.[8] In November–December 1989 US forces moved to evacuate Americans during the coup attempt, and generally protect US interests in the Philippines. During this operation, a large special operations force was formed, USAF fighter aircraft patrolled above rebel air bases, and two aircraft carriers were positioned off the Philippines.[1]

In early December 1989, USS Enterprise participated in Operation Classic Resolve,[9] President Bush's response to Philippine President Corazon Aquino's request for air support during the rebel coup attempt. Bush approved the use of US F-4 fighter jets stationed at Clark Air Base on Luzon to buzz the rebel planes at their base, fire in front of them if any attempted to take off, and shoot them down if they did.[7] The buzzing by US planes soon caused the coup to collapse. On 2 December 1989 President Bush reported that on 1 December US fighter planes from Clark Air Base in the Philippines had assisted the Aquino government to repel a coup attempt. In addition, 100 marines were sent from the US Navy base at Subic Bay to protect the US Embassy in Manila. Meanwhile, USS Enterprise remained on station while conducting flight operations in the waters outside Manila Bay.[citation needed]

CIA documents suggested that Aquino asked for assistance for air strikes against RAM positions, but Washington declined since it was a "political risk".[7]

Effects[]

Political and economic fallout[]

Politically this coup was a disaster for Aquino. Her vice president, Salvador Laurel, openly allied himself with the coup plotters and called for her to resign. Even Aquino's staunchest supporters saw her need for United States air support as a devastating sign of weakness. Most damaging of all, when the last rebels finally surrendered, they did so in a triumphant televised parade and with a promise from the government that they would be treated "humanely, justly, and fairly." One of the devastating results of this insurrection was that just when the economy had finally seemed to turn around, investors were frightened off, especially since much of the combat took place in the business haven of Makati. Tourism, a major foreign-exchange earner, came to a halt. Business leaders estimated that the mutiny cost the economy US$1.5 billion.[1]

Davide Commission[]

Following the failure of this coup, President Aquino established a fact-finding commission headed by COMELEC chair Hilario Davide Jr. to investigate and provide a full report on the series of coup attempts against her government.[10][11][12] The report became known as the Davide Commission Report.[12]

Participants of the December 1989 coup later blamed perceived deficiencies in the Aquino government in areas such as graft and corruption, bureaucratic inefficiency, and lenient treatment of communist insurgents as the reasons for the coup.[13][14] In response, the Davide Commission recommended several short-term and long-term countermeasures, including the establishment of a civilian national police force, a crackdown on corruption in the military, a performance review of appointive government officials, reforms in the process of military promotions, a review of election laws in time for the 1992 presidential elections, and a definitive statement on the part of Aquino on whether she intended to run for re-election in 1992.[15][16]

Later coups d'état[]

In 1990, there were other coup attempts in March and October. The Hotel Delfino siege happened on March 4, when suspended Cagayan governor Rodolfo Aguinaldo directed his private army estimated at 300 men[17] to seize the Hotel Delfino in Tuguegarao, Cagayan. This incident followed Aguinaldo's indictment on charges of rebellion and murder relating to his support for the failed Dec. 1-9 coup attempt. Brig. Gen. Oscar Florendo, armed forces chief of Civil Military Relations, was dispatched by President Aquino to serve Aguinaldo with an arrest warrant.[18] Florendo was taken hostage in the hotel along with more than 50 other guests.[19] After hours of standoff between the two sides, nearly 1,000 government troops[17] launched an attack to dislodge Aguinaldo's forces from the hotel; the government prevailed when more than 100 of Aguinaldo's men surrendered and about 90 were captured.[20] Florendo was shot at the Delfino by one of Aguinaldo's men and later died of his wounds.[19] At least a dozen others were killed in or around the hotel; scores of civilian supporters of Aguinaldo were arrested; and a truck with assault rifles, mortars, and crates of ammunition was captured.[21] During this melee, Aguinaldo fled with about 90 fighters for mountains in the north.[19]

Seven months later on October 4, the tenth and last coup attempt happened in an army base in Mindanao where Col. Alexander Noble and 21 others mutinied for two days until they surrendered on October 6 as it failed.[22]

References[]

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 "Operation Classic Resolve / Operation JTF-Philippines". http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/ops/classic_resolve.htm. 
  2. Davide Commission Report, p. 222
  3. Davide Commission Report, p. 222-225
  4. 4.0 4.1 Davide Commission Report, p. 229.
  5. Davide Commission Report, p. 224
  6. Davide Commission Report, p. 376
  7. 7.0 7.1 7.2 "DOW-QA Philippine Defense Chief says U.S. initiated offer to help EO495 quell rebel uprising". CIA. 1989-12-04. https://www.cia.gov/readingroom/docs/CIA-RDP90M01243R001000300020-6.pdf. 
  8. Powell, Colin L. (2012). It worked for me : in life and leadership. Tony Koltz (First ed.). New York. ISBN 978-0-06-213512-4. OCLC 757483449. https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/757483449. 
  9. "History of the USS Enterprise". https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/navy/enterprise/enterprise2.html. 
  10. "PURSUANT TO RA NO. 6832: Recommendations of the Final Report of the Fact Finding Commission". Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism. http://www.pcij.org/HotSeat/davidereport.html. 
  11. "R.A. 6832". https://lawphil.net/statutes/repacts/ra1990/ra_6832_1990.html. 
  12. 12.0 12.1 Cruz, Rodel A. (2013). "Security Sector Reform: Way Forward for Democracy and Development". The study of national security at fifty: Re-awakenings. Quezon City, Philippines: National Defence College of the Philippines. http://www.ndcp.edu.ph/wp-content/uploads/publications/CRUZ_Security%20Sector%20Reform%20Way%20Forward%20for%20Democracy%20and%20Development.pdf. 
  13. Davide Commission Report, p. 470
  14. "The Final Report of the Fact-Finding Commission: VII: Causes, Analysis, and Recommendations" (in en-US). 1990-10-03. https://www.officialgazette.gov.ph/1990/10/03/the-final-report-of-the-fact-finding-commission-vii-causes-analysis-and-recommendations/. 
  15. Davide Commission Report, pp. 509-530
  16. "Recommendations of the Final Report of the Fact-Finding Commission". Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism. 2003. http://www.pcij.org/HotSeat/davidereport.html. 
  17. 17.0 17.1 Yabes, Criselda (1990-03-05). "MANILA ENDS HOSTAGE STANDOFF" (in en-US). ISSN 0190-8286. https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/politics/1990/03/05/manila-ends-hostage-standoff/596eb9a9-a4cd-4760-b413-ce60368435de/. 
  18. "14 Die as Philippine Troops Fight Rebel Governor" (in en-US). The New York Times. 1990-03-05. ISSN 0362-4331. https://www.nytimes.com/1990/03/05/world/14-die-as-philippine-troops-fight-rebel-governor.html. 
  19. 19.0 19.1 19.2 Tribune, Uli Schmetzer, Chicago. "OUSTED GOVERNOR THREATENS AQUINO" (in en-US). https://www.chicagotribune.com/news/ct-xpm-1990-03-05-9001190185-story.html. 
  20. "Government troops beat back rebel attack" (in en). https://www.upi.com/Archives/1990/03/04/Government-troops-beat-back-rebel-attack/3889636526800/. 
  21. Drogin, Bob (1990-03-05). "Rebel Clash Puts Aquino in New Crisis : Philippines: The battle leaves a dozen dead, including a general. The renegade governor who supported December coup attempt escapes arrest.". https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1990-03-05-mn-1518-story.html. 
  22. "Philippine Rebellion Ends in Surrender : Mindanao: A renegade colonel gives himself up, and government forces recover two military camps on southern island.". October 6, 1990. https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1990-10-06-mn-1418-story.html. 

Bibliography[]

  • The Davide Fact-Finding Commission (1990). The Final Report of the Fact-Finding Commission (pursuant to R.A. No. 6832). Makati: Bookmark Inc.. pp. 118. ISBN 971-569-003-3. 
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