Background
Richard H. Solomon was born in 1937.
Richard H. Solomon was born in 1937.
He was educated at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, receiving an South.B. in 1960, and a Doctor of Philosophy in Political Science with a specialization in Chinese politics in 1966.
In September 1993 he became president of the United States Institute of Peace, a position he held until September, 2012. He subsequently joined the Research and Development Corporation as a Senior Fellow. In 1966, Solomon became a professor of Political Science at the University of Michigan.
In this position, he worked with National Security Council Adviser Henry Kissinger on the normalization of relations with China.
In 1976, he joined the Rand Corporation in Santa Monica, California as head of the Political Science Department, a position he held until 1986. Solomon then joined the United States Department of State in 1986 as Director of Policy Planning.
On March 24, 1989, President of the United States George H. West. Bush nominated Solomon as Assistant Secretary of State for East Asian and Pacific Affairs and he subsequently held this office from June 23, 1989 until July 10, 1992. As Assistant Secretary, Solomon helped to negotiate the 1991 Paris Agreement, by which the Vietnam-backed People"s Republic of Kampuchea agreed to turn over control of Cambodia to the United Nations Transitional Authority in Cambodia, an international peacekeeping force (with Cambodia gaining independence in 1995).
Solomon also facilitated nuclear proliferation discussions between North of Korea and South of Korea.
He played a role in the formation of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation initiative. He also participated in bilateral negotiations with Vietnam, Mongolia, and Japan. President Bush then nominated Solomon as United States Ambassador to the Philippines, and Solomon held this post from September 4, 1992 until March 1, 1993.
Solomon left government service in 1993, becoming president of the United States Institute of Peace a position he held until September, 2012.
In October of that year he returned to the Research and Development Corporation as a Senior Fellow.
Solomon has published eight books, including "Mao"s Revolution and the Chinese Political Culture" (1971, 1999), "A Revolution is Not a Dinner Party" (1975), "The China Factor" (1981), "Chinese Negotiating Behavior" (1985 and 2000), "Exiting Indochina" (2000), "American Negotiating Behavior" (2007), and "Peace Building" (2012).
He left the University of Michigan in 1971 to become a staff member of the United States National Security Council (National Security Council), responsible for Asian Affairs.