Pelagio
A. Cruz
(1912-1986)
Distinguished
Military Officer
A Distinguished military
officer, Pelagio A. Cruz was born in Baguio Pulong Gubat, Candaba, Pampanga on June 16, 1912. His family transferred to Baliuag,
Bulacan when he was about eight years old.
Cruz finished at the top of
his class at the Baliuag Elementary
School.
He pursued his secondary education at the provincial high school in Malolos,
where he graduated as valedictorian in 1932.
In June 1932, he enrolled
in the pre-law class at the University of the Philippines, but decided to transfer to the Philippine
Constabulary Academy of Baguio where he was a pensionado. He did this to
give3 way to his younger brother, who was also enrolled in the state
university. His father had died, and his mother could not afford to send them
together to college.
Cruz graduated as topnocher
at the PC Academy in 1935. He was commissioned third lieutenant in the
infantry. Later, he joined the first group of Filipino officers to study
military aviation at the new Philippine Army Air Crops Flying school. He finished the course in October 1937. He and his
co-graduates, Lieutenant Oscar Sales, Edwin Andrews, and Basilio Fernando,
together formed the nucleus of the Philippine Air Force.
He became commander of the
flying school. In 1941, he assumed command of the Maniquis Field in Camp Tine, Cabanatuan.
His flying school had three obsolete
B-10 light bombers used for transition flights from trainer planes to regular
aircraft. Philippines planes were not armed when the
Japanese Air Force invaded the Philippines skies. During the Banana campaign, he
was made commander of the Philippine Army Air Corps’ provisional infantry
battalion. He served “as a walking pilot,” precisely because the corps lacked
armed aircraft.
He won a Silver Star award
for gallantry in action for leading an attack against the Japanese at Aglaloma
Point. He recalled that in that
operation, 43 of his fine young men were killed. Most of them were air corps
boys who had been trained as infantrymen. They did not even know to handle
their rifles or how to use cover effectively.
When Bataan fell, Cruz was among the numerous
Filipino and American war prisoners who took the long march to Capas, Tarlac,
where they were held in concentration camps. He was released in October 1942. He
returned to Baliuag to recuperate from the debilitating malaria, which he and
many of his comrades had contracted while in the prison-camp.
Back in his hometown, Cruz
met most of his old friends who were members of the underground movement in
Bulacan. Later, he joined the province’s guerilla unit and became its chief of
staff. To elude the Japanese Kempetai, he and his family fled to the
swamplands of Candaba
After the war, he took up
his pilot refresher course in USAF flying schools. He returned to the Philippines a year later to become executive
officer of the Philippine Air Force, then commanded by
Col. Edwin Andrews. When Colonel Andrews died in the tragic “Lili Marlene”
crash on Mt. Makaturing in “ Lanao,
he assumed command of the Lipa Army Air Base in Batangas. On August
16, 1947, he
became PAF commanding officer.
On May
20, 1949, Cruz
received his temporary one-star rank as brigadier-general. He was assigned to
the Office of the Planning Board. In the same year, he was awarded the
Distinguished Service Star for his services as PAF commanding general.
In 1951, he enrolled at Fort Leavenworth’s Command and Staff School, where he graduated with honors.
Shortly after his return to the country, he was appointed commandant of the
PATC’s Command and General Staff School at Fort McKinley (now Fort Bonifacio).
He was Chief of Staff of
the Armed Forces, with the rank of lieutenant general, when Cruz retired in
1962, after 30 years of military service. Forthwith, he was appointed as chief
of mission to Japan of the Reparations Commission. In
1966, he became chairman of the Anti-Smuggling Action Canter, the forerunner of
the Finance Ministry Intelligence Bureau.
One of the few government
officials of the Marcos era to be retained by the Aquino administration, Cruz
was the commissioner of the FMIB when he died at the Philippine Heart Center,
after a heart by-pass operation, on October 21, 1986. He was 74.
Paula Katrina A. Vidallo
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