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From the Archives: Noynoy Aquino saved the nation, 1987

NOYNOY AQUINO SAVED THE NATION, OH QUESTIONS LEFT UNANSWERED!

From Hilarion Henares Jr’s column Make My Day
on the Philippine Daily Inquirer, August 31 1987

What was Noynoy Aquino doing outside at 1:30AM, when everyone else was asleep last Friday? A date with a girlfriend, a party, a night club caper?

No matter. He saved the nation, this Noynoy.

Up to the time he was accosted by rebel soldier in front of the St Jude Church, everything seemed normal, and the surprise attack was going on smoothly.

When he identified himself, the rebels opened fire, and that woke up Cory and tipped off the Presidential Security Forces.

Without him, the rebel forces would have surprised the Palace Guards and might have captured Malacanang ang Cory at her residence.

Cory is right, this was a Ngo Dinh Diem (or Salvador Allende) operation that was meant to kill her and her family. Otherwise the rebels would have never fired on Noynoy…but they did and luckily showed their hand.

Without the surprise factor, the Palaca guards readily dispersed the rebel attackers and forced them to go to Camp Aguinaldo.

The tide eventually turned. But can you just imagine what could have happened if one rebel with a hand grenade penetrated the President’s bedroom? Or captured the Aquino family and forced Cory with a gun at Kris’s head to announce their takeover of the nation?

***

Where was Juan Ponce Enrile all this time? No word from him, no support for the duly constituted authorities? No alibi for not attending the senate session?

Col. Gringo Honasan said the last time he saw Enrile was after he was proclaimed senator. Soon after, the senator was arguing against the constitutionality of maintaining checkpoints. Why?

What does Enrile’s objection to military checkpoints have to do with the busloads of rebel soldiers coming from Fort Magsaysay to the gates of Malacanang? To allow them to approach with the minimum of trouble and maximum secrecy?

After midnight I cannot drive from Makati Avenue to Dasma Village without being stopped by at least two checkpoints.

How come several truckloads of fully armed rebels were able to move through several provinces without being challenged by any checkpoint?

Was there collusion between the military police and Honasan’s forces? As there was between Honasan and the gate-keepers of Camp Aguinaldo?

***

Some radio amateurs, including young Bobby Viola, were listening in on military frequencies. As early as 11PM they were startled to hear unusual activity going on … Pare, saan ba kami pinapupunta? … Anong gagawin natin dito? … Maghanda na kayo d’yan, malapit na! …

Don’t tell me the Americans at Clark were not also listening as they usually do? Boy what cow dung they feed us for not knowing anything!

Most mysterious of all, how come loyal army signal corps men were not listening as they should? Or were they listening and chose to keep quiet?

***

Why did the rebels indiscriminately fire at civilians in Malacanang?

Said an ex-Secretary, “Remember when one of the RAMboy colonels said, ‘People Power? One blast from a grenade launcher will deflate the people power!’…Come on, maybe in February 1986 you would face up to armed soldiers, but would you honestly risk your life now for the likes of Komong Sumulong and Peping Cojuangco?’”

Perhaps for Cory and Tingting, but certainly not for Komong and Peping!

It might have been a direct order… Disperse all civilians you find on the streets, shoot if you need to… and that’s what the rebel officer probably meant when he threatened to have everyone shot on sight who interferes with their mission.

Was shooting civilians part of the rebel plot – the same policy of schrecklichkeit (frightfulness) Hitler applied on the massacred inhabitants of Lidice to break the spirits of his enemies??

***

Why were there no official government bulletins from 5am to mid-afternoon?

Why were the people kept in the dark during all the time Col. Gringo Honasan was giving us all that cow dung about having six battalions rushing down to Manila… about Red Kapunan leading a contingent of PMA cadets like the American cavalry rushing to relieve the beleaguered cowboys… about the rebel take-over of theVillamor airbase and control over helicopter gunships and fighter planes? … and about the capture of Camp Aguinaldo?

Why was the Western Police District policemen, trained to catch criminals, not to fight an army – used to assault Channel Four? Isn’t it a bit embarrassing for the army to depend on the police to protect it from its enemies?

Why did Cory take a long time to appear before television? Was Noynoy’s being shot kept from her? Was she so distraught about Noynoy’s wounds, as a mother should, that she lost her bearings for some time?

Who was taking charge of crisis management in those crucial hours when the public perception was that Gringo Honasan had won the war?

***

Nobody ever talks about the crippling jeepney strike that preceded the attempted coup d’etat. It was as if it were orchestrated by a small well-organized group. Who were they?

The nation-wide jeepney strike sprouted in all major cities – Manila, Cebu, Iloilo, Bacolod, Davao, Iligan – the first that succeeded in paralyzing the entire nation. Provincial buses were prevented by the strikers from entering Manila.

It was as if the strike was part of a diversionary tactic that riveted the attention of the nation on the leftist menace, and lowered their guard against any rightist threat.

Leftists, with their attention on the strike, were caught off guard, and stunned by the revolt.

The rebellion could not have succeeded as far as it did if not for the strike.

Was Honasan’s revolt timed to take advantage of the jeepney strike?

Lastly, what was IS Embassy assistant defense attaché Dennis Fowler doing in Villamor airbase among the rebels throughout all the time the drama of the attempted coup unfolded?

So many questions left unanswered!

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7 Responses

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  1. pinoybuzz says

    What an utterly false account.

  2. Miguel Ang says

    Saved the nation? What’s the connection between identifying himself then and the salvation of the nation? If Cory was killed together with her whole family, would that really thwart the nation? Was her administration efficient enough to count her death a great loss?

    How did that Noynoy saved the nation again?

    “Though Noynoy was armed with a 9mm pistol, he chose not to fire back.”
    ARE YOU SURE? WERE YOU THERE? OR JUST BECAUSE HE SAID SO?

    How about the news when he pointed his 9mm pistol to the protesters during the Hacienda Luicita tragedy? He did not opt to fire back against people assaulting him with gunshots but he was ready to kill defenseless protesters who were just voicing out their concerns?
    IS THAT SOMETHING YOU CONSIDER HEROIC?

    And yes, I was there when he pointed the gun towards the protesters.

    • noypipol2 says

      “Though Noynoy was armed with a 9mm pistol, he chose not to fire back.”
      ARE YOU SURE? WERE YOU THERE? OR JUST BECAUSE HE SAID SO? <– Hi Miguel, it's a news report verbatim from PDI, 1987, please read carefully thanks.

      If Cory was killed together with her whole family, would that really thwart the nation? Was her administration efficient enough to count her death a great loss? <– I would caution you to be prudent regarding the death of a woman loved by many to be not so great a loss. I remember the nation mourned.

  3. ricardo says

    Many candidates say one thing and do the opposite, while NOYNOY have shown that action is the best measure of ones character. This incident proved NOYNOY is the most courageous among all presidential candidates. Unlike the administration candidate who proved his incompetence and weakness during storm Ondoy. Her master proved one can’t judge the book by its cover, her master received high degree of education and appears decent just like him, however her 9 years of fraudulent governance brought all kinds of evil to the phil unseen in its history.

  4. sychitpin says

    THAT WAS PURE COURAGE AND BRAVERY, IN THE FACE OF A CLEAR AND PRESENT DANGER !

  5. mabini says

    while most politicians could not face civilians even on a peaceful day, NOYNOY faced gunfire of heavily armed hostile soldiers bravely, that’s the true test of courage and bravery, unlike other candidate who was afraid to attend people’s forum, and senate hearings to answer his colleagues C5 questions.
    NOYNOY is definitely the more qualified and competent candidate!

  6. noypipol2 says

    Complementary news article on the Philippine Daily Inquirer, August 30 1987:

    A son’s “instinctive reaction” to rush to his besieged mother led Benigno “Noynoy” Aquino III right into a rebels’ ambush.

    Noynoy, his left arm on a sling, met reporters yesterday to deny rumors that he was seriously injured during Friday’s dawn attack on Malacanang Palace by two busloads of rebel soldiers.

    President Aquino’s only son said he was at the Dasmarinas Village residence of Executive Secretary Joker Arroyo past midnight when he heard radio reports that Malacanang, along with other government installations, was under attack.

    He said he saw rebel soldiers positioned on the streetbend near St Jude’s Church, a stone’s throw from the Arlegui house. They were lying prone in an ambush position on both sides of the road, facing Sta Mesa Rotunda instead of the palace.

    He said he slowed down as the rebel soldiers signaled them to stop but then there were other contradictory orders, Noynoy said.

    He heard one say, “Balik ka sa kotse.” while the others shouted, “Dapa, dapa sa kalye.”

    “We failed to respond primarily because they had what looked like a tank beside them. This was also another indication to me that they were friendly forces,” he said.

    As he stopped, he said he tried to reason out with them. “I identified myself and everything but they still fired at us.”

    He said he and his bodyguard were hit in the first volley.

    He was nicked in theleft arm and hit by a piece of slug below his left ear.

    Though Noynoy was armed with a 9mm pistol, he chose not to fire back.



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