Retired Major General Perry M. Smith served 30 years in the U.S. Air Force.  During his military career, he commanded an F-15 fighter wing in Germany, served as the top Air Force planner, and was commandant of the National War College.  During the Vietnam War, Smith flew 180 combat missions in F-4 aircraft over Laos and North Vietnam.  He was inducted into the Georgia Aviation Hall of Fame in 2020.

He graduated from the U.S. Military in 1956. At West Point, he played intercollegiate lacrosse.  After his senior year, he was named as a member of the second team All American lacrosse team.  Smith later earned his Ph.D. in International Relations from Columbia University.  His dissertation earned the Helen Dwight Reid award from the American Political Science Association in 1968.  He has written 6 books including Assignment PentagonRules and Tools for Leaders (recently updated with co-author General Jeffrey Foley), and most recently Courage, Compassion, Marine: The Unique Story of Jimmy Dyess.  Rules and Tools for Leaders, with over 300,000 copies in print, is Smith’s most successful book.

He served as CNN’s military analyst from 1991 until he resigned in protest over CNN’s 1998 bogus nerve gas special (The Valley of Death).  He later served on contract with NBC, MSNBC, CBS TV, and radio.  He is a frequent blogger and op-ed contributor to the Augusta Chronicle.

Since moving to Augusta in 1990, he has been active in community activities, including raising funds for the river rooms of Saint Paul’s Church, the new Fisher House, the Kroc Center, the Boy Scouts, the Heritage Academy and the Augusta Museum of History.  A former board member of the Augusta Kiwanis Club, he has been an effective recruiter of new members.  Recently, the club, in recognition of his leadership, presented him with the George Barrett Award.  Smith serves as president emeritus of the board of trustees for the Augusta Museum of History and served on the board of the Augusta Warrior Project from 2006 until 2016.