VICTOR N. CORPUS
Brigadier General
Armed Forces of the Philippines (retired)
BG Corpus graduated from the Philippines Military Academy (PMA) in 1967.
In 1970, as a young lieutenant he enraged the Marcos regime by leading a
raid on the PMA armory. At the time he was a member of the Communist-led New
People’s Army (NPA) of the Philippines. Over the next few years he rose
through the ranks to become a member of the Philippines Communist Party
Central Committee (1975-1976.) Becoming disenchanted with the movement, he
surrendered in 1976 and spent the next 10 years as a political prisoner.
Once installed as President, Corazon Aquino granted Corpus amnesty and in
1987 reinstated him to the rank of lieutenant colonel. Subsequently, Corpus
held several positions throughout the Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP)
including Chief of the Intelligence Service from 2001 to 2003. He completed
his active military service in October, 2004, after a year as Commanding
General of the Armed Forces Civil Relations Service.
In 1987 BG Corpus wrote Silent War, which provides an insider’s
look at the Communist insurgency in the Philippines and includes an outline
of how the movement could be defeated. The following year he co-authored the
AFP’s anti-insurgency Campaign Plan: Lambat Bitag. In 2000 he
authored the Philippines’ National Peace and Development Plan.
President Arroyo named Corpus as the Philippines’ czar in charge of
battling illegal logging, a practice blamed for the 2004 landslides in
Quezon Province that killed hundreds of people. The New People’s Army was
believed to be heavily involved in illegal logging activities.
BG Corpus holds a Master in Public Administration from the Kennedy School
of Government, Harvard (1990.)