Fidel V. Ramos
Fidel Valdez Ramos (born
March 18,
1928), military hero of the 1986 People Power Revolution that toppled the dictatorship of
Ferdinand Marcos, became the 12th
President of the Republic of the
Philippines on
June 30,
1992. He succeeded
Corazon Aquino and governed until
1998, when he was succeeded by
Joseph Estrada. His six-year term as president was widely recognized in building economic and political growth and stability in the country despite facing communist insurgencies, an Islamic separatist movement in Mindanao and the onslaught of the
1997 Asian financial crisis.
Born in
1928 in
Lingayen,
Pangasinan, the son of a
United Nations ambassador and a cousin to Ferdinand Marcos, Ramos pursued a career in the military and in engineering. His long association with the
United States started when he graduated from
West Point Military Academy in
1950, culminating with a graduate degree in civil engineering at the
University of Illinois the following year. He fought alongside U.S. forces in the
Korean War and later commanded a Filipino contingency in the
Vietnam War.
His ascent to office of President was a brilliant and shrewd display of political calculation, a testament to his avowed intelligence and integrity. But it was not without its controversy. Although committed to democracy, he served the Marcos regime for more than 20 years -- in the military, as head of the Philippine Constabulary, the country's national police force, and as a trusted advisor. However, in
1986, Ramos sided with Aquino. The military followed his lead and swung the pendulum in her favor.
After Aquino assumed the presidency, she appointed Ramos Chief of Staff of the Armed Forces, and later Secretary of Defense, foiling seven coup attempts against the Aquino administration. In December
1991, Ramos declared his candidacy.
Towards the end of his term, Ramos talked of amending the Constitution to allow for a second term (A Filipino can only serve one six-year term as President). Widespread public protests forced him to drop the demand, and he left office after the end of his term in 1998.
Ramos became the country's third president of
Ilocano descent and the first
Protestant. He is married with five children.