The research center based in Washington, called the Nixon Center, is nonpartisan and focuses on foreign affairs.
In 1995, Kemp assumed his current position at the Nixon Center, where he has continued to publish a number of studies on the contemporary Middle East.
He also serves on the advisory council of the Nixon Center.
Board member of the Nixon Center.
The Nixon Center was a Washington, D.C.-based public policy think tank.
The group changed its name to the Nixon Center in 1998.
In 2001, the Nixon Center acquired the journal The National Interest.
An appendix of a report by the Nixon Center of those convicted of terrorist crimes asserts he was convicted on March 19, 2003.
Geoffrey Kemp, director of regional strategic programs at the Nixon Center in Washington, said: "The point is that this was a no-win situation.
"Now's the time to worry," said Geoffrey Kemp, a Middle East expert at the Nixon Center, a Washington policy institute.