Shouts of excitement in the newsroom of radio station dwIZ greeted the mention by US President Barack Obama of Philippine Navy Capt. Roy Trinidad on Tuesday.
The shouts came from my staff at 鈥淚sumbong Mo Kay Tulfo鈥 who were watching Obama on TV at ceremonies held at the American War Memorial in Fort Bonifacio as my program was on the air.
I was inside the radio booth but I heard the shouts of my staff in聽 the newsroom.
They recognized Trinidad as the energetic, good-looking uniformed military officer聽 walking with a swagger鈥攁s most military officers do鈥攚ho put some sense into the chaotic government relief efforts, or lack of it, in the few days immediately after Supertyphoon 鈥淵olanda.鈥
I鈥檓 sure the doctors at St. Luke鈥檚 Medical Center, led by Sammy Tanzo, would also have reacted the same way as my staff聽 did had they caught the US President mention Trinidad as one of the main characters in 鈥渁n incredible story that captures the strength鈥 of US-Philippine partnership.
We were witness to how Trinidad, in the very early days of the government relief efforts in the devastated places of Leyte and Samar after Yolanda, commanded American and Filipino troops sent to Eastern Visayas.
I saw how Trinidad apportioned the limited food supply in his hands among the American and Filipino soldiers who were at the Tacloban City airport or what remained of it after Yolanda.
When the Philippine Airlines plane that carried the medical and mercy mission, which Dr. Tanzo and I headed, landed at the Tacloban City airport in the early morning of Nov. 11, 2013, three days after the strongest storm on earth pummeled Leyte, Eastern Samar and some parts of the Visayas, Roy Trinidad was there to meet us.
Trinidad assigned us at the foot of the leaning airport tower which we turned into a hospital to treat the sick and injured jostling for a ride out of Tacloban.
While Dr. Tanzo and his St. Luke鈥檚 doctors treated the patients assisted by my staff who served as nursing aides, I was able to closely observe Trinidad at work.
Calm in the midst of the pandemonium around him, Trinidad did the Philippines proud when elite American troops assigned to help in the relief efforts followed his orders.
As a Navy captain, Trinidad鈥檚 rank is equal to a full-fledged colonel in the Army and Air Force, but some American officers who followed his orders were of the same rank as he.
Trinidad dispatched US and Philippine helicopters to remote areas with ease, supervised the landing of military aircraft from other countries which unloaded troops and relief supplies, and assigned men to control the huge, unruly crowd.
He consoled some civilians among the crowd leaving Taclo-ban City who had lost their loved ones.
Trinidad鈥檚 demeanor was not lost on the St. Luke鈥檚 doctors and my staff, especially the women, who found him charming and 鈥渧ery handsome.鈥
The captain somehow moderate my anger at the Aquino government for its slow response to Eastern Visayas鈥攁s opposed to the very quick response of the United States鈥攂ecause he made the government presence felt with his leadership in that聽 neck of the woods.
How very ironic that it took President Obama to recognize Trinidad鈥檚 Herculean efforts in Tacloban City in the wake of Yolanda.
Roy Trinidad, who graduated from Philippine Military Academy in 1991, is a member of the country鈥檚 elite military unit, Special Warfare Group (Swag), the counterpart of the US Navy Seals.
When I congratulated him yesterday on the phone, I was touched by the humility of the Iligan City native.
鈥淪ir, it was teamwork. I was just part of the team of soldiers from the US and the Philippines who did even more than me. They should also be recognized,鈥 Trinidad said.