Thursday, March 8, 2018

Abat: Warrior Who Saved Mindanao Dies at 92



By Mortz C. Ortigoza

Former Army General Fortunato Abat, a warrior of the Mindanao Campaign versus the Moro, died at 7 p.m. on Wednesday at the Veterans Memorial Medical Center (VMMC).
“The Day We Nearly Lost Mindanao” was a book authored by then Army Commanding General Abat.
Army Commanding General Fortunato Abat accepts the surrender of a Muslim rebel's commander  and his battle scarred warriors.Photo Credit: General Allan Luga

My father was assigned in Cotabato City during this conflict in the middle of the 1970s and he narrated to me how they called the Northrop F-5 combat jets from Mactan Air Base to drop napalm bombs against the Libyan government backed  Moro National Liberation Front (MNLF) under the leadership of Nur Misuari, a former University of the Philippines' professor, to deter them in conquering Cotabato City.
According to the March 1973 issue of the Far Eastern Economic Review, the first shipment of firearms, courtesy of Libya’s Strongman Muammar Qaddafi and Sulu born Sabah State Minister Tun Datu Haji Mustapha, landed in December 1972 at the town of Lebak in Cotabato province. Boats, each powered with three Volvo-Penta 170 engines, brought in Belgian made Cal 7.62 rifles, anti-personnel mines, grenades of the cylindrical unserrated type, plastic explosives, Cal 30 LMG, Browning carbines, Cal 30 Mis and several thousand rounds of ammunition to Cotabato and other landing sites regularly for the next fourteen months.
WARRIOR – Former Cotabato City’s Metro District Commander, later Two-Star Police General, and presently Pangasinan Congressman Leopoldo Bataoil extends his snappiest salute near the death bed of former Army Commanding General Fortunato Abat who, as the Central Mindanao Command (CEMCOM) Chief , was the brain in 1973  in flushing out the Moro Secessionist in Mindanao who cordoned the city and Awang Military Complex and overtaken many towns in Cotabato Province. Abat died at 7 p.m. last Wednesday in the Veterans Memorial Medical Center (VMMC).


"We almost lost that war," recalled Brig. Gen. Ciriaco Reconquista (Retired) as quoted in a defense forum, who as a transport plane pilot flew hundreds upon hundreds of dead and wounded soldiers from the battlefields of Mindanao and ferried troops repeatedly from NPA-infested areas in Luzon to the MNLF front. "The (Muslim) rebels were better-armed." In terms of firepower, the military had only one sustainable advantage: the Air Force. At no time was this power wielded more dramatically than in November 1972 at the battle of Sibalu Hill in Sulu near the southern tip of the Philippines.
Shortly after noon, he received the first of a series of frantic calls from Jolo, Sulu, requesting air support to extricate a battalion of Marines trapped within the MNLF strong- hold. 

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WAR CRY - The members of the Moro National Liberation Front
leads by Chairman Nur Misuari (blue polo center) in chanting their war cry.


 Jolo, Cotabato City Nearly Overtaken by the MNLF

In an exerpt posted at the forum’s Defense of the Republic of the Philippines it said that: “(Air Force) Colonel Pompeyo Vasquez flew back to Jolo where he would orchestrate the attack as air controller the following morning. By dawn, wave upon wave of F-5 and F-86 jet  fighters, as well as T-33 trainer jets and C-47 gunships, took off for Jolo every minute - bombarding the enemy camp accurately and relentlessly. After each sortie - some pilots flew three sorties during that attack - the aircraft would dart back to Mactan to reload. Before the morning was over, helicopters landed at Sibalu Hill to extricate the marines that narrowly escaped a massacre. 


A few months later, the Air Force would again play a vital support role in the massive military counter-offensive in the central Mindanao province of Cotabato. By early 1973, the MNLF forces had virtually surrounded Cotabato City and the Awang airport complex. With overseas support for training and arms, the rebels were gearing up for riverine and land attacks to seize the seat of government in Central Mindanao. This would complete the first step in their grand plan to turn Mindanao, Palawan and the Sulu chain of islands into the Bangsa Moro Republic”.

“Counter- insurgency troops hop on board the C-47. To thwart the Cotabato rebel attack, the Central Mindanao Command (CEMCOM), headed by Brig. Gen. Fortunato Abat of the Philippine Army, enlisted the support of every branch of the Armed Forces, as well as paramilitary civilian home defense forces. Aside from airlifting troops from Manila and Cebu to the war zone, the PAF swooped into the thick of battle. Composite Air Support Force Cotabato (CASFCOT) fielded Huey choppers, rocket-bearing U-17 aircraft and C-47 gunships as CEMCOM troops advanced to recapture town after town from rebel hands”.

Datu Ali Sansaluna, who headed the Cotabato Command with 5,000 to 6,000 MNLF, selected Lebak as the main logistical based in Mindanao Island.
By the way 2,000 of these troops were armed with European made assault automatic rifles. 
 As a grade school pupil in M'lang, North Cotabato soldiers, who took a respite at the market place, would tell us Christians that in a firefight armed Moro had a rope tied on his body so in case he died his comrade who was behind him could easily pull him and  retrieve the rifle slung around his cadaver and continue the fight to death, son of a gun, with the infidels.
According to my father, Lebak was where a young PMA graduate and a lieutenant named Gregorio Honasan was wounded in the intense firefight with the brave Moros.
Yes Virginia, brave as then Artillery Commander Colonel  Rodolfo "Toto'" Canieso, an Ilonggo baw linti gid, had to order 105 and 155 Howitzers to bomb not the MNLF but the inexperienced Filipino soldiers behind them so they would not run away from the firefight.
 “I even brought home the bench where he lied in Awang Airport in Maguindanao while waiting for the C-130 Cargo Plane that will bring him to V-Luna Hospital in Manila,” he told me when I saw on the newspaper in 1986  a mestizo Colonel Honasan doing closed in with the jittery Defense Minister Juan Ponce Enrile after bosom friend President Ferdinand Marcos discovered his and the colonel nicknamed Gringo plan to power grab.
My father, who until now kept those old military maps,  showed to me  the terrain of Lebak as a military advantage to the MNLF.  He cited the Tran and Tran Peidu rivers whose coastlines provided excellent ingress for the landing of military hardware from Libya, Sabah, and Europe. Tran river also provided the natural obstacle to any State Security’s incursion into the fortified area. The sea there acted as easy avenue of withdrawal.
My father, a Korean War Veteran, grudgingly admired the MNLF because they would even face and fight to the death the soldiers who were mostly Ilocanos unlike the communist NPA rebels, intoxicated by Marx and Mao teachings, would rather choose to hide after they ambushed the state troopers.
"They even taunted the soldiers that their M-16 Armalites were made of plastic and their bullets would ricochet whenever they hit the blade of a cogon  grass thus could not be at par with their Belgian made FAL rifles that could  cut half the body of a soldier if one mowed it".
The liberation of the town of Maganoy on 2 April 1973, as quoted in the Forum, hinged on a risky air mobile operation in which six Hueys had to execute a tight spiral - one after the other - from 5,000 feet to a marked landing spot at the town plaza to insert elements of the 22nd Infantry Battalion. From March to August 1973, the PAF provided air cover and tactical support to ground forces, interdicted waterborne rebel reinforcements, broke up rebel concentrations and blasted fuel and ammunition dumps. The military attack culminated in the two-month campaign to destroy the well-secured rebel logistics base in Barrio Tran, Lebak and to restore government control over the town. Secondary explosions following a series of air strikes heralded the success of the mission. From there, CEMCOM gained the initiative and shifted to unconventional warfare as the rebels, in Gen. Abat's assessment, began resorting to "harassment, limited attacks, depredations, sabotage and terrorism...to keep their image of strength." Even as the Muslim secessionist movement waned in the face of peace and diplomatic initiatives, the military found no respite as it confronted the growing NPA threat on several fronts.
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Army Commanding General Fortunato Abat in a pep-talk with soldiers in Mindanao.
Photo Credit: General Allan Luga
Going back to Abat, as a young teenager, he entered the Philippine Army as an enlisted man on April 15, 1944 before the Allied Liberation of the Philippines. He continued his secondary education in La Union High School even after World War II and completed his education in the year 1947.
Abat entered the Philippine Military Academy right after finishing his high school diploma, and graduated in the Class of '51, and was commissioned as 2nd Lieutenant in the Philippine Army. 

Along with 2nd Lieutenant Fidel V. Ramos (who later became Philippine President), Abat, and my father joined the Philippine Expeditionary Forces to Korea (PEFTOK), where they served with distinction under the United Nations flag.

He was married to former Corazon Bulatao, a teacher from San Carlos City, Pangasinan, with whom he has six children.

Moreover, some foreign affairs lessons that my friend Department of Foreign Affairs Secretary Alan Peter Cayetano could learn from the Apo of Saluyot country's Ilokosvakia former President Ferdinand Marcos.
 Thanks to Marcos dexterity on diplomacy, he was able to avoid the secession of Mindanao by denouncing Israel annexation of the Arab lands, befriended Oil Exporting Producing Countries (OPEC) where the Philippine depended heavily and if the detente was not handled properly could make the Philippines marginalize and weak, and won Indonesia President H. Muhammad Suharto's support where he did not only reject Misuari plea to use two areas in Indonesia as dumping areas of arms from abroad to the Philippines but interceded on behalf of the Filipinos with the Muslim countries. Without the support of these governments, probably Mindanao had been long under the MNLF.
And my Christian name Marcelo Mortz Ortigoza had been converted to probably Datu Udtog Ramanam  Amin or Datu Mortz Salsalani Jakulen, God Forbid!

READ: 


I and a Colonel  Pushed Airplane at War-Torn Awang


Ranger Capt Uses Men as Bait to Locate Muslims' Snipers



You can read my selected columns at mortzortigoza.blogspot.com and articles at Pangasinan News Aro. You can send comments too at totomortz@yahoo.com)

14 comments:

  1. EX-AFP CAPTAIN GABRIEL ORTIGOZA: I heard of “Gen. Abat” from the story of my father when I was growing up in Central Mindanao long time ago in 1970s.
    When I was assigned at PMA (1995-2003) I saw General Abat visited the academy when his grandson Tutti Caringal was still a plebe. The “great warrior” went to the bowling area for a meal. I happened to be there. I saw how PMA top brass headed by PMA Superintendent Maj. Gen. Victor A Mayo (PMA 66), aide, and MA staff scrambled and rushed to the bowling to see a respected military leader and mentor. While approaching Gen. Abat, Gen. Mayo said, “Sir, sana nagpasabi ka na darating ka para naka handa kami para sa iyo.” Gen. Abat just smiled and replied, “it’s ok Vic. I’m here as a civilian visitor.”
    On Wednesday, Gen. Fortunato U Abat (PMA 51) passes away at Philippine Veterans Medical Center. He was 92. Condolence to the family of former Philippine defense chief and Army Commanding General Fortunato Abat. May he rest in peace.

    Renel Argenio :He was a fortunate General because during his time AFP is strong and credible
    Mar C. Ortigoza :We have a lot of combat jets then like squadrons of F5, F86, T-33 where some of them were armed w napalms to bombed out the wits of the bad guys.
    Renel Argenio :That is a third gen fighter jet surplus but credible....also the Philippine Navy is credible but we didn't have submarine till now

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    Replies
    1. It is wonderful to see an anecdote about my grandfather, Gen. Victor Mayo. Thank you for this.

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  2. Merilyn Ladao :Condolence sir Abat sir...i salute you.nkita kita personal...dito sa mindanao...panahon ng pag evacuate namin...

    James Bual: He was the CENCOM Cmndr, 1974 when i was assigned at 27IB, 4ID. My snappiest salute Sir, RIP.
    Totz Eucare :Snappy salute r.i.p sir thanks for saving mindanao šŸ™condolence to your family

    Mac Koyanz :Rest In Peace Sir Abat.. What you did is unforgetable.. Condolence to the Family..


    Fred Bautista Condolences,, Warrior soldiers don't die in the heart of the FILIPINOS,,, They just fade away,
    Sol Melanie Teodosio Snappy salute for you Sir Gen.Fortunato Abat brave warrior Hero Condolence to his family RIP

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  3. POLITICAL COLUMNIST MORTZ ORTIGOZA: My blog I posted last night, with Congressman Bataoil extending his snappiest salute to General Abat, became viral, thousands of views and countless of shares na after 9 hours. Filipinos all over the world loved our military. The Marawi Siege enamored them with the soldiers and then here comes the news of Abat and the soldiers fighting to death in a war in early 1970s where they nearly lost Mindanao, thanks to our air superiority that saved the day.

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  4. MORTZ ORTIGOZA : Napalm bombs (as seen dropped by a Syrian jets) that saved Cotabato City and Military Complex Awang, Maguindanao in 1974 when Generals like Abat and Colonels like Luga ran the war there against the MNLF who was backed by the Libyan government that supplied superior armaments like the Belgian made FN- FAL assault rifles. President Ferdinand Marcos, thanks to his dexterous talent on diplomacy, was able to avoid the secession of Mindanao by denouncing Israel annexation of the Arab lands, befriend OPEC countries where Philippine depended heavily, and won Indonesia President Suharto's help with the Muslim countries. Without the support of these countries, probably Mindanao had been long under the MNLF of Nur Missuari.
    Wikipidea: International law does not specifically prohibit the use of napalm or other incendiaries against military targets,[23] but use against civilian populations was banned by the United Nations Convention on Certain Conventional Weapons (CCW) in 1980.[25] Protocol III of the CCW restricts the use of all incendiary weapons, but a number of countries have not acceded to all of the protocols of the CCW. According to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI), countries are considered a party to the convention, which entered into force as international law in December 1983, as long as they ratify at least two of the five protocols. Approximately 25 years after the General Assembly adopted it, the United States signed it on January 21, 2009, President Barack Obama's first full day in office.[26][27] Its ratification, however, is subject to a reservation that says that the treaty can be ignored if it would save civilian lives. VIDEO: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K1RyJTx726A

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  5. James Bual :Yes sir actually i was assigned and we have a detachment there in ur place, Dungguan we back in 1976, we were there during the strong earthquake that jolted mostly in north cot area
    1

    Mar C. Ortigoza :James Bual sa poblacion Mlang kami sir. Father ko Air Force na assigned sa Awang starting noong 1973, We came from PMA where me and my siblings were born. Bata pa ako names like Canieso, Abat, Luga, Julius Javier, Kapunan who ferry my father and dropped him sa Huey sa Mlang, Honasan who was wounded in Lebak I kept hearing from my father. Ang military magazine na binabasa ko noong maliit ako iyong Ang Tala and some U.S old magazines brought by C-130 from Clark.

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  6. Hazel Carumba :Maka apo na lang ta sige gyera gihapon šŸ˜‚šŸ˜‚
    1


    Mortz C. Ortigoza :Grabe nga giyera from Black Shirt, to MNLF, to MILF. Your uncle the Chief of Police of Tulunan North Cotabato died in the mid 1970s shooting it out in a telephone booth encounter with the Muslim Rebels. I even wrote a blog on that encounter with the MNLF.

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  7. Arlene Estrada-silvestre :May anak din ata cia na PMA noon.

    Edgardo Banal :Paboritong heneral siya ni Apo Makoy.


    Antoine DeMactan :He was the origin of the Ƅbat uniform we wore in ROTC. His son also another Ayer died in combat in the late 70s. A line of noble warriors! RlP General Ƅbat.

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  8. Dher Villaber :REST IN PEACE SIR.....Ipalit na sa kanya ang mga bagong hirang na mga Colonel na sina Alvarez, Pacquiao ,Legarda, at ang pinakabagong gustong sumama sa grupo si inday Sarah at isabak na sa Gyera laban sa mga NPA..para naman may pakinabang sa kanila ang buwis na pinapasweldo natin sa mga yan..

    Mar C. Ortigoza: Meron na pong kapalit sir, two-star general si DILG Under Sec Martin Dino. Matapang po iyon dating barangay captain.

    Gerardo Reynaldo :I've been looking for that book. Where can i find it?

    Francismichael Martinez im hoping to read it too

    GERARDO REYNALDO : The scale of the battles were huge but we in Mindanao were kept in the dark. It is only now, after reading this, thay we know about it.

    Edwin Sonoy :Met Gen Abat back in the 70s when I was a boy through my Dad. He was my Dad’s contemporary.

    ReplyDelete
  9. Antoine DeMactan: He was the origin of the Ƅbat uniform we wore in ROTC. His son also another Ayer died in combat in the late 70s. A line of noble warriors! RlP General Ƅbat.

    Carlos L. Luz : Rest easy ,Sir. A salute to a principled warrior.

    Felix Rabanzo : R.I.P. Gen. Abat. Salute! Condolence to the family.

    William Sabaria : RIP Gen. Abat! May you rest in peace.

    Ernesto Jr Rivera: R.I.P Gen. Abat and condolence to your family. You lived a very long principled life.


    Eor Orogo Rempola :RIP General. Now you can be with your son who was also a hero who died fighting for this country.

    ReplyDelete
  10. Aside from Libyan Leader Muammar Qadaffi, The man responsible for Malaysian support to the Filipino Muslim rebels was Tun Datu Haji Mustapha, the Chief Minister of Sabah. He was born in Sulu and had several relatives in elective positions there. He was also a guerilla fighter in Jolo during the Japanese occupation of the Philippines in World War Two.54 Mustapha earned the friendship of most of the Muslim rulers in the Middle East, most especially King Faisal of Saudi Arabia and Libyan leader Muammar Qaddafi by his demonstrated religious zeal in converting the natives and the Chinese in Sabah to Islam.

    ReplyDelete
  11. As a grade school pupil in M'lang, North Cotabato soldiers, who took a respite at the market place, would tell us Christians that in a firefight armed Moro had a rope tied on his body so in case he died his comrade who was behind him could easily pull him and retrieve the rifle slung around his cadaver and continue the fight to death, son of a gun, with the infidels.
    According to my father, Lebak was where a young PMA graduate and a lieutenant named Gregorio Honasan was wounded in the intense firefight with the brave Moros.
    Yes Virginia, brave as then Artillery Commanding General Rodolfo Canieso, an Ilonggo, had to order 105 and 155 Howitzers to bomb not the MNLF but the inexperienced Filipino soldiers behind them so they would not run away from the firefight.
    “I even brought home the bench where he lied in Awang Airport in Maguindanao while waiting for the C-130 Cargo Plane that will bring him to V-Luna Hospital in Manila,” he told me when I saw on the newspaper in 1986 a mestizo Colonel Honasan doing closed in with the jittery Defense Minister Juan Ponce Enrile after bosom friend President Ferdinand Marcos discovered his and the colonel nicknamed Gringo plan to power grab.
    My father, who until now kept those old military maps, showed to me the terrain of Lebak as a military advantage to the MNLF. He cited the Tran and Tran Peidu rivers whose coastlines provided excellent ingress for the landing of military hardware from Libya, Sabah, and Europe. Tran river also provided the natural obstacle to any State Security’s incursion into the fortified area. The sea there acted as easy avenue of withdrawal.
    My father, a Korean War Veteran, grudgingly admired the MNLF because they would even face and fight to the death the soldiers who were mostly Ilocanos unlike the communist NPA rebels, intoxicated by Marx and Mao teachings, would rather choose to hide after they ambushed the state troopers.
    "They even taunted the soldiers that their M-16 Armalites were made of plastic and their bullets would ricochet whenever they hit the blade of a cogon grass thus could not be at par with their Belgian made FAL rifles that could cut half the body of a soldier if one mowed it".
    Moreover, some foreign affairs lessons that my friend Department of Foreign Affairs Secretary Alan Peter Cayetano could learn from the Apo of Ilokosvakia former President Ferdinand Marcos.
    Thanks to Marcos dexterous talent on diplomacy, he was able to avoid the secession of Mindanao by denouncing Israel annexation of the Arab lands, befriend Oil Producing Countries (OPEC) where the Philippine depended heavily and if the detente was not handled properly could make the Philippines marginalized and weak, and won Indonesia President H. Muhammad Suharto's support where he did not only reject Misuari plea to use two areas in Indonesia as dumping areas of arms from abroad to the Philippines but interceded on behalf of the Filipinos with the Muslim countries. Without the support of these governments, probably Mindanao had been long under the MNLF.
    And my Christian name Marcelo Mortz Ortigoza had been converted to probably Datu Udtog Ramanam Amin or Datu Mortz Salsalani Jakulen, God Forbid!

    ReplyDelete
  12. Good morning, well a I am a son of a soldier, during those times my father remember General Abat, he is new enlisted personnel at that time, when he visit the camp or should I say Fort Magsaysay (known today as NOLCOM), he remember him as a fond of manggang Hinog, puto lasol and dinuguan, he also remember his military exploits of course, he couldn't believe that they have same height he said... Hahahha, jokes on him. Good day and Rest in Peace Sir.

    ReplyDelete
  13. EXCERPTS: The Government's initial response to the escalating conflict during the first
    quarter of 1973 was to put more troops into the troubled area. By the first week of
    March 1973, the situation became very serious to require Presidential action. President
    Marcos designated Brigadier General Fortunato Abat as head of the newly formed
    Central Mindanao Command (CEMCOM). Abat was then the Commanding General of
    the Third Infantry Brigade (Separate) in Camp Lapu-lapu, Cebu City. Marcos' orders
    to General Abat were:
    I am sending a plane right now to bring you to Cotabato. You shall take
    command of all units and military personnel (there) ... I have directed
    the Chief of Staff to send you reinforcements . . . Study the situation
    carefully, plan well. Any thing that you need, don't hesitate to call me

    ReplyDelete