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A Man Among Men – Major Richard Meadows

20130516-075502.jpgI just finished reading ‘The Quiet Professional’ by Alan Hoe; the only biography that exists of Major Richard ‘Dick’ Meadows. It allowed me to complete the puzzle and connect the dots on what I consider to be the most significant individual in Tier One US Special Operations history – Dick Meadows is a legend in the US Army SOF community but his contributions to Tier One SOF have never, in my opinion, been given the credit they deserve.

It all started with a discussion I had with my good friend Ken Hackathorn many years ago after I successfully completed Delta Force Selection and Assessment and began a 15 year career in that Unit. Ken made the assertion that Dick Meadows had a lot more to do with forming Delta than he was publicly given credit for. Of course I had read Charlie Beckwith’s book ‘The Delta Force’ and it is well known that Col Beckwith was not only the first commander but also ramrodded the concept of Delta to the powers that be and turned it into a reality. But Unit commanders are overseers, captains of the ship if you will, they are not individuals who get into the weeds and get dirty ‘forming’ a new capability; those situations require subject matter experts and experienced NCO’s who are true masters of their trade and can sort thru the task at hand and bring a new capability to life. These individuals are mission focused, motivated, confident, and are true leaders that inspire confidence up and down the chain of command; in other words they are like Dick Meadows.

Dick Meadows entered the Army at the age of 15 in some degree to escape his childhood from a broken home, an abusive alcoholic father, and the hopelessness of a West Virginia coal mining town. He viewed the Army as the family he never really had and to overcome what he perceived to be the handicap of a 9th grade education, he committed himself to be the absolute best soldier he possibly could; a true master at his chosen profession. At this he succeeded in a manner that will likely never be rivaled- a brief list of his accomplishments is staggering;

The youngest master sergeant of the Korean War at the age of 20

The first enlisted US Army SF exchange soldier with the British 22 SAS; after successful completion of their selection program ( which he volunteered for ) he was made troop sergeant of an operational troop within a Sabre Squadron ( a honor of unbelievable magnitude since he was an American attached to the British Army )

One of the first two HALO jumpmaster/instructors in the US Army

As a Recon Team leader in MACV-SOG (RT Ohio ) his team captured 13 POW’s ( more than any other team leader ) and provided proof of the Ho Chi Minh trail and NVA involvement in the war in South Vietnam with photographic, video , and POW proof. This amongst other accomplishments got him a battlefield commission to Captain, the first of the Vietnam War. He was widely considered the One-Zero ( Recon Team Leader ) that set the standard for the rest to follow; this belief punctuated by having never lost a man under his command

20130516-075341.jpgSelected as Assault Team Leader for the Son Tay Raid; Meadows organized, trained the assaulters and refined the assault plan on what has been widely considered as the first ‘Delta’ mission due to the impact the detailed planning and execution had on the Unit that followed – the template from that historic raid still being used to this day

Chosen as a special civilian ‘advisor’ to Col Beckwith, Meadows helped organize, select, refine, develop, and train future Delta Force operators – his ‘fingerprints’ can be seen in every aspect of that organization today from the extremely demanding selection and assessment course, operator training course, detailed mission planning, and professional standards and attention to detail that Delta is famous for.

Dick Meadows led an advance team into Tehran when Delta needed trusted personnel on the ground during final planning and immediately before launch of Operation Rice Bowl – Meadows and his team performed close target reconnaissance, procured assault force transportation, and secured a daytime hide site for the assaulters immediately before the assault was to be conducted.

Beyond these accomplishments Meadows helped pioneer small, but key pieces of equipment for SOF use such as the ‘Singlepoint’ sight used by Son Tay raiders for night time target engagements. This concept eventually led to red dot sights such as Aimpoints and Eotechs which are standard issue for US Special Operations and, in my opinion, should be considered the greatest combat target engagement enhancement in small arms history.

My gut feeling about the importance of Major Meadows in Delta Force history was solidified when I had the good fortune of meeting a former Unit member at the 2013 SHOT show in Las Vegas. Chuck C. was an individual I had heard of but never met until I had the honor of doing so in January of 2013. Chuck C. was a graduate of Operator Training Course #4 ( I graduated OTC #23 in June of 1989) . I asked Chuck about Dick Meadows and my buddy Ken’s theory of his involvement in the early days of Delta. He confirmed that Meadows was involved in every aspect of the Unit early on and even though he was a civilian, and retired from active duty, his knowledge and experience left an impression on all those that formed the fledgling Delta Force.

20130516-075144.jpgMajor Meadows had numerous awards including a Distinguished Service Cross but it has been said if the true scope of his contributions to our country were known he would have received the Medal of Honor. I wholeheartedly agree.

Major Richard ‘Dick’ Meadows is one of only a few statues, that I am aware of, located on Ft. Bragg, NC. Another significant one is of Col Bull Simons, leader of the Son Tay raid, and former friend and commander of Meadows, who hand picked him for the Raid. But in my estimation the Meadows statue is the most significant as it represents an individual who set the standard that all true SOF warriors aspire to; the consummate Quiet Professional.

Larry Vickers
Vickers Tactical Inc.
Host of TacTV

21 Responses to “A Man Among Men – Major Richard Meadows”

  1. bulldog says:

    Great historical reference EG. This keeps us informed and involved. You ought to write a book my friend.

    Y

    • SSD says:

      That’s all LAV. He served in the unit and he told me about the book on Meadows. It was most fitting that he write this review.

  2. Bman says:

    Great information LAV. I knew the name was familiar. Then recalled the stories about him and SOG. What is amazing to me is that Armt SF has broken ground on so many things and yet they are labeled as teir 3 SOF “due to unit capabilities” and you see Rangers at teir 1 and 2 implying more capabilities than SF. I have yet to have someone point out why Rangers are deemed at having more capabilities than SF. SR abd DA have been a bread and butter mission for SF since their conception. They can even do large unit operations as they did in Son Tay and Northern Iraq.

    • Jason says:

      LOL…the Rangers can call themselves whatever they want, but in 18 months it’s back to high and tights and 24/7 training missions

      • Tactician73 says:

        Bman- I’m not sure either why S.F/Green Berets don’t get the credit like some of the other units out there, but while I was stationed @ FT.Bragg as a commo geek, I realizes these guys where top notch. They would do P.T in brown tee shirts and black shorts not like us garrison troops. Also they would do PT twice a day or go to the gym to workout. The U.S Army S.F are truly the the base/foundation of all Special Operation in the Dept.of Defense and without them there won’t be Modern Warfare concept today. This is 31F20, I’m out…..

        • Brando says:

          It’s not about tier levels – SF is unique among SOF in the FID/UW mission.

      • Tony says:

        This exhibits a profound lack of knowledge of the Regiment’s current capabilities.

  3. BH says:

    Thanks for the outstanding lesson on one of the legends of our community. While many Americans like to think of “us” as a peaceful nation, our real history is of a proud, warlike people with a host of great warriors in our ranks. As you’ve made clear, Dick Meadows was one of the most important and deserves recognition.

  4. Thanks for that history lesson Larry. Men like him need their stories told.

  5. Jimbo says:

    When my last reenlistment came up, I was asked where I wanted to do the oath. I did it in front of his statue. He was a true American hero.

  6. Doobs says:

    A hero among heroes.

  7. Well put Lary.

    Have a good one,
    Connor

  8. Derek says:

    The school at Ft. Benning I work at gets the pleasure every class to be briefed by one of the raiders. This gentleman is the one that told me about this book and it is one of the best I have ever read. Hearing the first hand account really brings it home for the students. When I first visited Bragg before, the two places I went on post was the SF museum and the Maj Meadows statue.

  9. straps says:

    Proof positive that the stories behind the stories are the most compelling. Thanks to both of you for putting this out there.

  10. SGT Rock says:

    Thanks LAV! This was a good read as he was an essential part of US Army SF history. I try to school my younger Soldiers on leaders like this and have a Stud of the Month program where I have them study the individual and their accomplishments to see how they’ve changed or influenced Army training, operations, or doctrine.

  11. Andrew says:

    I just finished this incredible book last week. Another great book about another SF legend is Hunting the Jackal by and about Billy Waugh. Billy joined the Army during the Korean War, served through the Vietnam War in SF and SOG, then served in the CIA and was instrumental in finding and tracking Carlos the Jackal in Africa, and, post 9/11 as a septuagenarian, was with one of the first CIA/SF teams to enter Afghanistan.

  12. Frank says:

    Good review by LAV on THe Quiet Professional. DIck Meadows is the standard. On another note LAV talks about Chuck C. Chuck C. is a Vietnam Vet and a legend himself in SOF. He got out and went on to another profession where I had the pleasure of meeting him. He is well know in his second profession and is very much respected among his peers.

    Chuck C. is another example of the consummate Quiet Professional who you never hear about. This country owes much to those guys.