4.9 • 667 Ratings
🗓️ 22 January 2025
⏱️ 160 minutes
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Richard Rice spent three decades in the US armed forces and was one of the founding members of what would become the revered Delta Force. We discuss his journey into the military, being hunted in Vietnam, compassion in combat, Mogadishu, transitioning into education, innovating veterans' education, GORUCK and so much more.
Richard retired from the U.S. Army as a Special Forces Senior Non-Commissioned Officer in 1994 after 30 years of service. The last 25 years of which were spent in various Special Operations Forces (SOF) assignments. He was a Program Coordinator, Director and Vice President at Fayetteville Technical Community College from 1994 to 2015.
He began his career in the 82nd Airborne Division before joining Special Forces and then MACV-SOG, the most elite and decorated unit to fight in the Vietnam War, where he did two combat tours to begin a long and storied career. Colonel Charlie Beckwith, a fellow Special Forces soldier who he met in Vietnam, became both friend and mentor and personally recruited Rich for a “new unit” that later became known as Delta Force. Beckwith sent Rich to a couple of specialty courses in the U.S. Army and to the British Special Air Service (SAS) Selection course in England.
Upon his return to the United States he helped organize, establish and serve in the unit during Operation Eagle Claw (he still has the keys to the garage where all the getaway vehicles were stored in Tehran), Grenada, Panama, Nicaragua, Cuba, Pakistan and Afghanistan where he, his teammates and his favorite animals (donkeys) aided the mujahideen resistance to the Soviet occupation (the story recounted in Charlie Wilson’s War). He also served in the Battle of Mogadishu in 1993 (Black Hawk Down) before retiring from the Army and then working in higher education at Fayetteville Technical Community College where he was nationally recognized for developing a competency-based program for awarding college credits for military education and training.
Retiring after completion of 20 years in the North Carolina Community College System as the Vice President of Military Programs, Richard continues to participate in developing leaders by mentoring, speaking at leadership conferences, and addressing post graduate audiences. He holds a Masters in Business Administration with Honors and a Bachelors of Science in Business Administration (with a concentration in management) Summa Cum Laude, both from Campbell University.
Rich has lost many friends in service to America and by any rational account he should not still be alive, either. Service and mentorship are his great passions, the ideals of the American way of life remain his northern star, and he’s never been known to turn down a cold beer or a good conversation with anyone who has something important to say. Rich should have several Purple Hearts but he was always too old school to file the paperwork, claiming it to be a “waste of time.”
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0:00.0 | This episode is sponsored by 511, a company that I've used for well over a decade and continue to use to this day. |
0:07.3 | And 511 is offering you guys the audience of the Behind the Shield podcast a discount on every purchase you make with them. |
0:14.4 | Before we get to that code, I want to highlight a couple of products that, again, I personally use today. |
0:19.7 | One of the most impressive products they just |
0:22.6 | released is their Rush Backpack 2.0. Now, for many of you, whether you're going to the fire |
0:28.0 | station, the police station, whether you're traveling, with your family, whether you're taking |
0:31.6 | training courses, we have to fly, we have to drive, we have to take trains. And I have to say, |
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0:44.3 | There are so many different compartments. The way it sits on your back is incredibly comfortable. |
0:49.1 | If you are a concealed carry person, there's also a spot for a weapon. So they've thought of multiple, multiple |
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1:40.3 | My thinking was simply, if I'm going to have a, why not I have one that protects me as well. |
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