He first became Team Leader of the Home Defense Forces Group (Airborne) at the Army Special Warfare Brigade based in
Fort Magsaysay,
Nueva Ecija province. He also served as intelligence officer for various units of the Army and also distinguished himself during the brief insurgency war in
Mindanao.
As an Army General Gazmin would earn his first star and hold the title
Brigadier General after nearly six years of distinguished service as Commander of the Presidential Security Group. He would later get appointed as Defense and Armed Forces attaché at the Philippines’ Embassy in
Washington, D.C. After his tour overseas, he would serve as Brigade Commander of the 3rd Infantry Brigade, 1st Infantry division based in Isabela,
Basilan province. In 1996, Regimental Commander, Special Forces Regiment (Airborne) Special Operation Command, Commander, Special Operations Command (SOCOM) – commander of the 103rd Infantry Brigade – 1st Infantry (Tabak) Division. In September 1998, Gazmin was appointed Commander of the Southern Luzon Command (
SOLCOM) – the Special Forces Regiment (Airborne) and later the Special Operations Command of the Philippine Army in 1997, and the Southern Luzon Command in 1998.
Commanding General of the Philippine Army He would assume the post as the 40th Commanding General of the
Philippine Army upon the appointment of President
Joseph Estrada on July 13, 1999, and would retire as a Lieutenant General on his 56th birthday on October 22, 2000, the mandatory age of retirement for officers in the Philippines’ military.
Military awards and commendations Gazmin was awarded the Philippine Legion of Honor, three Distinguished Conduct Star, three Distinguished Service Star, one Gold cross medal, one Bronze Cross medal, eleven Military Merit medals, one Military Commendation medal, four Long Service medals, four Combat Commander's Kagitingan badges, seven Anti-Dissidence campaign medals & ribbons. As an Army commander, he would also receive the following awards; nine
Luzon Anti-Dissidence campaign medals & ribbons, seven
Visayas Anti-Dissidence campaign medals & ribbons, eight Anti-Dissidence campaign medals & ribbons, one Presidential citation badge, two Philippine Army command plaque in 1997 & 1998, one American Legion Citation of Appreciation, one AFP parachutist badge and countless number of Letter of Commendations.
Relationship with the Aquino family On December 21, 1969, then-Lieutenant Gazmin married his long-time fiancée, Rhodora Hernández, with Senator
Benigno S. Aquino Jr. serving as principal sponsor. Like Gazmin, Senator Aquino was also born and raised in
Tarlac. When
Ferdinand Marcos, the
10th president of the Philippines, declared
martial law on September 21, 1972, Senator Aquino and several high-ranking politicians from the opposition were arrested and imprisoned. Aquino and Senator
José W. Diokno were secretly transferred from
Fort Bonifacio in
Taguig to Fort Ramón Magsaysay in
Laur, Nueva Ecija. Aquino would continue his seven years of imprisonment in
Laur, coincidentally having Gazmin as jailer at the detention facility. Gazmin at the time was District Commander of the 1st Military Service Detachment, Military Service Unit of the Army. Adhering to his oath as a professional soldier, and following conditions set under Martial Law, Gazmin discreetly monitored Aquino's status and welfare. He would extend courtesies to Aquino's wife, Corazon, when she visited her husband. During Senator Aquino's 40-day
hunger strike, Gazmin would secretly bring milk to the detention cell and oversee the solon's daily medical check-up. President Marcos later granted Senator Aquino permission to travel to the United States for a much-needed heart operation on May 8, 1980. Aquino would return to the Philippines on August 21, 1983, only to be
assassinated at the tarmac of the
airport now bearing his name. The President in November 1985 later called for a
snap election, and a widowed Corazon Aquino, petitioned by the masses, to run against him under a
united opposition. Gazmin was still on assignment in
Mindanao when the
People Power Revolution overthrew the Marcos government and installed Corazon Aquino as the 11th President on February 25, 1986. President Aquino called on Gazmin to head her security entourage and to command the newly organized Presidential Security Group. As commander of the PSG, then-Lt. Colonel Gazmin helped defend President Aquino's government from at least seven ''
coups d'etat'', ending in
December 1989, marked as the most bloodiest attempt to overthrow the democratic government of Aquino. Gazmin kept close ties to Mrs. Aquino and the rest of her family members while he returned to the Philippine Army and even after he disappeared from public view when he completed his tour of duty as Ambassador to Cambodia in 2004. On August 1, 2009, the day Aquino
died after a year-and-a-half battle against
colorectal cancer, Gazmin and several senior military officials who served as her presidential security detail paid their last respects to their former Commander-in-Chief. Gazmin served as a
pallbearer for Aquino's casket during services at
Manila Cathedral. When Aquino's only son, then-Senator Benigno Aquino III, started his campaign for the presidency in early 2010, Gazmin was one of the security consultants for the campaign sorties. Gazmin's long standing integrity in service, professionalism and his distinguished loyalty to the Aquino family resulted in his temporary departure from retirement, to be called again to public service as Secretary of
National Defense when Aquino assumed office on June 30, 2010. == Defense Secretary ==