New People's Army rebellion

The New People's Army rebellion (often shortened to NPA rebellion, among other acronym-based names) is an ongoing conflict between the government of the Philippines and the New People's Army (NPA), which is the armed wing of the Marxist–Leninist–Maoist Communist Party of the Philippines (CPP). It is the world's longest ongoing communist insurgency, and is the largest, most prominent communist armed conflict in the Philippines, seeing more than 43,000 insurgency-related fatalities between 1969 and 2008. Because the National Democratic Front of the Philippines (NDFP) which is the legal wing of the CPP, is often associated with the conflict, it is often also called the CPP-NPA-NDF conflict, or simply the C/N/N conflict, especially in the context of peace talks with the Philippine government.

New People's Army rebellion
Part of the Cold War and the Insurgency in the Philippines

Main areas of communist activity in the Philippine archipelago during the 1970s and 1980s
DateMarch 29, 1969 (1969-03-29) – present
(54 years, 10 months, 2 weeks and 4 days)
Location
Status Ongoing
Belligerents
Government of the Philippines
Supported by:
 United States (advisors)
 China
(since 2016)
Communist Party of the Philippines
Supported by:
 China (until 1976)
Commanders and leaders
Civilian leaders

Bongbong Marcos
(President)
Gilberto C. Teodoro
(Defense Secretary)
Benjamin Abalos Jr.
(Interior Secretary)


Military

Romeo Brawner Jr.
(Armed forces chief)


Police

Benjamin C. Acorda Jr.
(Police chief)
Patrick T. Villacorte
(SAF chief)

...full list

Jose Maria Sison #
(CPP founder)
Fidel Agcaoili #
Luis Jalandoni


NPA commanders

Benito Tiamzon 
Wilma Austria 
Gregorio Rosal #
Jorge Madlos 
Jaime Padilla (POW)

...full list
Units involved

Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP)

Philippine National Police (PNP)

New People's Army (NPA)


CPP–NPA splinter groups
MLPP-RHB
APP
RPA
ABB
CPLA
Strength
150,000 (AFP)
228,000 (PNP)
1,500 (2023)
Casualties and losses
1,132 killed (1969–2022) (according to the Philippine Army) 62,841 killed (1969–2022) (according to the Philippine Army)

The history of the rebellion can be traced back to March 29, 1969, when Jose Maria Sison's newly formed CPP entered an alliance with a small armed group led by Bernabe Buscayno. Buscayno's group, which was originally a unit under the same Marxist–Leninist 1930s-era Partido Komunista ng Pilipinas-1930 (PKP-1930) with which Sison had split, was renamed the New People's Army (NPA) and became the armed wing of the CPP. Less than two years later, President Ferdinand Marcos introduced martial law, leading to the radicalization of many young people and a rapid growth of the CPP-NPA.

In 1992, the NPA split into two factions: the reaffirmist faction, led by Sison, and the rejectionist faction, which advocated the formation of larger military units and urban insurgencies. Several smaller insurgent groups eventually emerged from the split. This includes the 1995–present Marxist–Leninist Revolutionary Workers' Party rebellion and the rebellion of the Marxist–Leninist Party of the Philippines and its armed wing, the Rebolusyonaryong Hukbong Bayan (RHB),:682 which broke away from the Communist Party of the Philippines in 1998 and has since been in conflict with both the government and the CPP. Prior to the 1992 split, there had been one other significant splinter group - 1986–2011 Cordillera People's Liberation Army which had chosen to put greater emphasis on regional autonomy for the Philippines' Cordillera region.

The year 2022 was marked with the deaths of Sison and the husband-and-wife duo of Benito and Wilma Tiamzon, the former being the alleged leader of the NPA.

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