Fabian Ver

This name uses Philippine naming customs; the middle name or maternal family name is Crisologo and the surname or paternal family name is Ver.
Fabian Ver

Gen. Fabian C. Ver AFP
Birth name Fabian Crisologo Ver
Born (1920-01-20)January 20, 1920
Sarrat, Ilocos Norte, Philippine Islands
Died November 21, 1998(1998-11-21) (aged 78)
Bangkok, Thailand
Allegiance  Philippines
Service/branch Philippine Constabulary
Rank General
Commands held Armed Forces of the Philippines
Battles/wars World War II
Hukbalahap Rebellion

Fabian Crisologo Ver[1] (January 20, 1920 – November 21, 1998) was a General and Chief of the Armed Forces of the Philippines under President Ferdinand Marcos.

Early life and education

Fabian Ver was born on January 20, 1920 and grew up in the town of Sarrat in Ilocos Norte.[1]

Ver attended the University of Manila where he obtained a Bachelor of Law degree and later the University of Louisville where he graduated with a degree in police administration in 1963. He also undertook training in Hawaii and with the Los Angeles Police Department[1]

Military and political career

During World War II, he acted as a guerrilla intelligence officer with the rank of third lieutenant[2] and after the war, he went on in the military service. During then Senator Ferdinand Marcos' term as Senate President in the early 1960s, he was one of his military advisers. He was at that time serving in the Criminal Investigation Service of the Philippine Constabulary with the rank of Captain.

The Philippine Constabulary was a that time, a major service of the Armed Forces of the Philippines that deals with law enforcement and peace and order in the country. It is now at present, the Philippine National Police.

According to the autobiography book of now Senate President Juan Ponce Enrile entitled, "Juan Ponce Enrile: A Memoir", Ver was a man of Marcos through and through. He could not and would not say no to Marcos and would blindly carry out the wishes and orders of Marcos without question.

Thus, he became the most loyal officer to Marcos and upon the latter's election as President of the Philippines in 1965, he became part of the latter's inner circle. And, Ver worked his way up through the military ranks.

He was most trusted military officer of then President Ferdinand Marcos as Martial Law was declared on September 21, 1972. and he was also known as Marcos' chief enforcer,and was the highest among the Rolex 12. Minister Juan Ponce Enrile, as the Martial Law Architect, the highest among the Rolex 12, while General Ramos was the chief of the Philippine Constabulary.

He became further fiercely loyal to Marcos, and Marcos repaid his loyalty by appointing him as the head of the Presidential Security Group, then known as the Presidential Security Command. When he was due for retirement in 1976, Marcos extended his term indefinitely. Like Ver, Ramos got his extension as the Chief of PC. He also headed the then National Intelligence and Security Authority (now, the National Intelligence and Coordinating Agency), the spy department of the Philippines, sending government agents to search for anti-Marcos critics, a group like the Philippine Constabulary who was notorious in the arrest of oppositions leaders, Pimentel etc. In effect, NISA acts as secret police force of the Marcos regime while PC was involved in the torture under Ramos.

Martial law was lifted in 1981, and Ver was appointed as chief of staff of the Armed Forces of the Philippines over a cousin, then Major-General Fidel Valdez Ramos, then the chief of the Philippine Constabulary. Thus, Ver became the most powerful officer in the military, as he headed now two institutions: the AFP where PSC belongs and NISA. Police officials, military men, businessmen, politicians, bureaucrats and other prominent figures like judges kowtowed to him. While Enrile maintained the highest post as the Minister of National Defense.

Many feared to displease him as he has direct access to Marcos and has his ear as well as of then First Lady Imelda Marcos. In fact, his three sons, who are all military officers like him were in the zenith of power. His eldest son, Irwin was rapidly promoted to colonel and named chief of staff of the Presidential Security Command. His other son, Rexor was the chief of the close- in security of Marcos and youngest son, Wyrlo, was the commander of the Armored Unit of Malacanang Palace. Irwin Ver graduated no. 1 in the Philippine Military Academy in 1970. During Ver's term as AFP chief of staff, he was biased in favor of the military officers that came from ROTC program by giving them incentives and named them to key important posts in the military,thus, this made the military officers who graduated from the Philippine Military Academy resentful. He also extended schooling privileges to his relatives, friends in the military especially the graduates of professional military schools that are close to him, to Marcos and to Imelda, including those who paid homage to him and filled the high posts in the military with Ilocano ROTC-trained military officers. This was the era of favoritism in the AFP. Gen. Romeo Espino, Ver's predecessor, was AFP Chief of Staff for the longest term in the Philippines military. Like Ver, Espino was too an ROTC graduate in the University of the Philippines, but he was fair in administration of military affairs during his time.

Ver also instituted, along with Marcos the extension of services in the military of those military officers who overreached their retirement age.

As Marcos disregarded the authority of then Defense Minister Juan Ponce Enrile in the 1980s, he changed the military chain of command. Under the new chain of command, the authority would evolve from Marcos as president and commander-in-chief of the armed forces up to Ver, the chief of staff of the armed forces.


Crisis

Ver kept aging officers loyal to himself and also to Marcos on the armed forces, thus making young officers disgruntled. The Reform the Armed Forces Movement (RAM) was formed by these young officers, led by then Colonel Gregorio Honasan as a result of this. The RAMboys, as they were known in the Philippines, played a key role in Marcos' overthrow. As the Marcos regime grew unpopular during these years, Marcos would be in and out of office due to kidney ailments. Political mismanagement would ensue, culminating with the 1983 assassination of popular oppositionist Senator Benigno Aquino, Jr. upon his return from exile in the United States. The Agrava Commission, an independent fact-finding body put up by Ferdinand Marcos found evidence to verify that the military and Ver were involved, but he was subsequently acquitted in 1985 by Marcos. After the tumultuous snap elections on February 7, Marcos announced that he was replacing Ver with Fidel Ramos due to his alleged ties with the Aquino assassination although he tacitly kept Ver in power.

Later life

After the tumultuous snap elections of 1986, the EDSA Revolution would come. Ver advised Marcos to give him orders to fire on the swelling number of protesters, but Marcos stubbornly refused to and dismissed him with a salute. This led to the end of the Marcos regime.

Following the People Power Revolution, Ver and his family along with the Marcoses were exiled to Hawaii. He was not allowed to return to the country during the administration of Presidents Corazon Aquino and Fidel V. Ramos. He returned during the presidency of Joseph Estrada but faced lawsuits which linked him to the assassination of Ninoy Aquino and Aquino's alleged assassin, Rolando Galman.[3]

In November 21, 1998, Ver died while confined in a hospital in Bangkok, Thailand.[3] He died due to complications of the lung.[4]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 "A Filipino on Spot". The New York Times. 25 October 1984. Retrieved 26 February 2016.
  2. "General Fabian C. Ver". University of the Philippines - Reserve Officers' Training Corps. Retrieved 26 February 2016.
  3. 1 2 Vanzi, Sol Jose (21 November 1998). "Newsflash !!! General Ver is Dead". Philippine Headline News Online. Retrieved 26 February 2016.
  4. "Marcos Ally Ver Dies In Bangkok". The Filipino Express. 6 December 1998. Retrieved 26 February 2016.

External links

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