AFP Northern Luzon Command
Northern Luzon Command | |
---|---|
Coat of Arms of the AFP Northern Luzon Command | |
Active | 1 April 1987 - Present |
Country | Philippines |
Role | Conventional and Unconventional Warfare, Anti-Guerrilla Operations |
Part of | Under the Armed Forces of the Philippines |
Garrison/HQ | Camp Servillano Aquino, Tarlac City, Tarlac |
Nickname(s) | NoLCom |
Motto(s) | Pride of the North |
Anniversaries | April 1 |
Engagements | Anti-guerilla operations against the NPA and local criminal elements |
Decorations |
Philippine Republic Presidential Unit Citation Badge |
Commanders | |
Current commander | LtGen Romeo Tanalgo[1] |
Notable commanders | LtGen Rodrigo F Maclang, BGen Bayani N Fabic AFP, MGen Romulo F Yap AFP, MGen Edgardo T Batenga AFP, LtGen Rodolfo C Garcia, LtGen Romeo B Dominguez AFP, LtGen Romeo P Tolentino AFP, Gen Gregorio Pio Catapang |
Insignia | |
Unit Patch | Northern Luzon Command Emblem |
The Northern Luzon Command, known officially as the NoLCom, is one of the Armed Forces of the Philippines' Wide Support Commands Combating Terrorism and Insurgency in Northern Luzon.
Mission
Conduct support operations to establish a condition wherein the well-being of the people of Northern and Central Luzon are protected and enhanced.
History
On 1 October 1972, the Northeast Command (NOREASCOM), Armed Forces of the Philippines, was organized and activated pursuant to General Headquarters, Armed Forces of the Philippines, Letter of Instruction 5/72, with an area of responsibility including:: Cagayan, Ifugao, Isabela, Kalinga-Apayao, Nueva Vizcaya, Quirino and Aurora.
On 14 November 1981, pursuant to General Headquarters, Armed Forces of the Philippines Letter of Instruction 2/81, the NOREASCOM AOR was expanded to include the Regional Command 1 (RECOM 1) AOR. The resulting command was redesignated Northern Command (NORTHCOM).
On 1 April 1984, General Headquarters, Armed Forces of the Philippines issued Letter of Instruction 1/84, which redesigated NORTHCOM as Regional Unified Command 2 (RUC 2). Its AOR consisted of all the provinces contained in the Philippine's Region 2.
On 1 April 87, General Headquarters, Armed Forces of the Philippines issued Letter of Instruction 3/87 creating a unified command spanning Regions 1 and 2. This unit was designated as Northern Luzon Command (NOLCOM). It was initially headquartered at Camp Melchor F Dela Cruz, Echague, Isabela. On 29 March 1988, NOLCOM was reorganized as an area command covering Northern and Central Luzon. Its headquarters was also transferred to Camp Aquino, Tarlac City.
1 April 2002, NOLCOM was deactivated and subsequently reactivated as a unified command pursuant to a Secretary of National Defence memo to the Chief of Staff, Armed Forces of the Philippines, dated 12 April 2002.
On 15 January 2009, to further enhance and support its internal security operations campaign in Central and Northern Luzon, NOLCOM activated Joint Task Force Amihan, pursuant to Letter of Instruction 01-2009. The JTF would be headed by the Deputy Commander, NOLCOM with Task Groups under it composed of personnel from the joint services under the Command and complemented by local Philippine National Police personnel.
Lineage of Commanding Officers
- BGen Bayani N Fabic AFP - (29 Mar 1988 – 10 Jul 1989)
- BGen Orlando Q Antonio AFP - (10 Jul 1989 – 29 Mar 1990)
- BGen Gumersindo T Yap AFP (29 Mar 1990 – 27 Dec 1990)
- BGen Ernesto B Calupig AFP (27 Dec 1990 – 17 Jun 1992)
- MGen Romulo F Yap AFP (17 Jun 1992 – 26 Aug 1993)
- MGen Orlando V Soriano AFP (26 Aug 1993 – 16 Apr 1994)
- MGen Edgardo T Batenga AFP (16 Apr 1994 – 7 Apr 1995)
- MGen Oswaldo P Villanueva AFP (22 Jul 1995 – 9 Jan 1997)
- MGen Ismael Z Villareal AFP (22 Jan 1997 – 1 Oct 1997)
- MGen Rene S Dado AFP (1 Oct 1997 – 19 Feb 1999)
- MGen Rolando C Bautista AFP (19 Feb 1999 – 30 Oct 1999)
- MGen Arturo B Carrillo AFP (30 Oct 1999 – 28 Mar 2001)
- LtGen Rodolfo C Garcia AFP (28 Mar 2001 – 5 Feb 2003)
- LtGen Romeo B Dominguez AFP (5 Feb 2003 – 16 Aug 2005)
- LtGen Romeo P Tolentino AFP (16 Aug 2005 – 21 Jul 2006)
- LtGen Bonifacio B Ramos AFP (21 Jul 2006 – 16 Aug 2007)
- LtGen Rodrigo F Maclang AFP (16 Aug 2007 – 6 May 2008)
- MGen Isagani C Cachuela AFP (6 May 2008 – 16 Jun 2009)
- LtGen Ricardo A David, Jr AFP (16 Jun 2009 – 2 Jul 2010)
- LtGen Gaudencio S Pangilinan AFP (2 Jul 2010 – 22 Jul 2011)
- LtGen Jessie Dellosa AFP (22 Jul 2011 – 12 Dec 2011)
- (OIC) MGen Ricardo Banayat AFP (13 Dec 2011 – 20 Jan 2012)
- LtGen Anthony J Alcantara AFP (21 Jan 2012 - 5 July 2013)
- LtGen Gregorio Pio P. Catapang, Jr. AFP (5 July 2013 – 9 June 2014 )
- LtGen Felicito Virgilio M Trinidad Jr AFP (9 June 2014 - 13 Aug 2015)
- MGen Glorioso V Miranda AFP (13 Aug 2015– 10 March 2016)[1]
- LtGen Romeo Tanalgo AFP (10 March 2016 - Present)[1]
Organization
The following are the units that are under the Northern Luzon Command.
- 5th Infantry (Star) Division, PA
- 7th Infantry (Kaugnay) Division, PA
- 1st Air Division, PAF
- Naval Forces Northern Luzon, PN
Operations
- Anti-guerrilla operations against the New People's Army
- Anti-terrorist operations against known terror groups operating in their AOR.
Awards and Decorations
Campaign Streamers
Award Streamer | Streamer Name | Operation | Date Awarded | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|
Presidential Unit Citation Badge | SAR/DRR Ops, TS Parma | 4 February 2010 | General Orders No. 112, GHQ-AFP, dtd 04 Feb '10 | |
Presidential Unit Citation Badge | General Elections, Philippines | 1 July 2010 | General Orders No. 641, GHQ-AFP, dtd 1 July '10 | |
Badges
Military Badge | Badge Name | Operation | Date Awarded | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|
AFP Election Duty Badge | General Elections, Philippines | 21 May 2010 | General Orders No. 513, GHQ-AFP, dtd 21 May '10 | |
Trivia
- BGen Bayani N Fabic AFP is now serving as the Senate's Sergeant at Arms.
- LGen Rodolfo Garcia became AFP Deputy Chief of Staff, and then later on became AFP Vice Chief of Staff.
References
- 1 2 3 Mangosing, Frances (March 10, 2016). "Aquino swaps posts of 2 3-star AFP generals ahead of elections". Philippine Daily Inquirer. Retrieved July 15, 2016.
Coordinates: 15°26′16.32″N 120°35′40.00″E / 15.4378667°N 120.5944444°E