Born in Alexandria, Virginia in
December 1937, Hare grew up in the U.S. Foreign Service. Traveling with his family, he
studied in London just after the war and graduated in 1955 from the American Community
School in Beirut, Lebanon. In 1959, he received a Bachelors degree with high honors from
Swarthmore College with a major in political science and minors in history and English
literature. He studied international relations at the University of Chicago before passing
the Foreign Service examination in 1960.
Hare was Ambassador to Zambia from 1985 to
1988, where, in addition to his bilateral responsibilities, he initiated the first
high-level dialogue with the exiled African National Congress of South Africa, then
headquartered in Lusaka. From August 1988 to July 1989, he was the principal deputy
assistant secretary of State in the Bureau of the Near East and South Asian Affairs of the
Department of State.
After retiring from the U.S. Foreign
Service in 1991, Hare became the vice president of the Middle East Institute in
Washington, D.C. In October 1993, he was appointed by President Clinton as Special Envoy
to the Angola Peace Process and in this capacity participated in the negotiations that led
to the Lusaka Protocol of November 1994. Subsequently, Hare continued to have a close and
active involvement with the implementation of the Lusaka agreement, frequently traveling
to Angola for meetings with the principals of UNITA and the Angolan government. At the
beginning of August 1998, Hare relinquished his responsibilities as special envoy and
became the executive director of the US-Angola Chamber of Commerce.
Hare is the author of two books: A
Diplomatic Chronicles of the Middle East: A Biography of Ambassador Raymond Hare and Angolas
Last Best Chance of Peace: An Insider's Account of the Peace Process published by the
US Institute of Peace (September 1998).