Mohammed Soliman

Director, Strategic Technologies and Cyber Security Program, Middle East Institute; Manager, Middle East and North Africa, McLarty

Mohammed Soliman is the director of the Strategic Technologies and Cyber Security Program at the Middle East Institute, where he leads a global team of scholars to explore the policy challenges associated with the intersection of technology, geopolitics, and business in the Middle East and emerging markets more broadly. He is also a visiting fellow with the National Security Program at Third Way. Soliman has written for or been quoted by Financial Times, The Wall Street Journal, The Economist, USA Today, Foreign Policy, Foreign Affairs, and The National Interest and has appeared on the BBC, France 24, and Deutsche Welle. He frequently speaks at conferences and has authored numerous journal articles and book chapters on emerging markets, geopolitics, and global technology policy. Soliman has additionally served as a country analyst for the Peace Tech Lab at the United States Institute of Peace, a Huffington Fellow at the Institute for the Study of Diplomacy, and a Junior Centennial Fellow at Georgetown University’s School of Foreign Service. A native of Cairo, Soliman began his career as an engineer and worked as a consultant, providing strategic advisory services for local and international businesses. He was included on the 2021 CSIS National Security & Foreign Affairs Top 50 Leadership List and is a Middle East Policy Council 40 Under 40 awardee. Soliman has a Master of Science in foreign service from Georgetown University’s Walsh School of Foreign Service and a Bachelor of Science in infrastructure engineering from Egypt Aviation Academy. 

Where Are China-Gulf Relations Headed in 2024?

On January 23, AGSIW hosted a discussion on China-Gulf relations.