How are you sure that anybody taunted Blackburn after the earthquake? And how do you know Solomon could be the "Head" of the PLR? He could be just second-in-command to somebody else. New Orders - Edit At Will 00:39, October 9, 2011 (UTC)
I read on an Arricle before. Zephalian 02:22, October 22, 2011 (UTC)
Why did Solomon betray C.I.A, America, his country? In the end he says "This isnt about winning!". Could it mean revenge? He was a CIA asset, was for years. Did he finally snap, was he planning this? Any ideas?
I'm pretty sure one of the NPCs says that it's about revenge - one of the members of Dima's squad, I think. Revenge for what, unfortunately, didn't seem to be worth mentioning. Atypicaloracle
On his hand was a star, so i was think he was ex-spetnaz, something happend to him in the past?
When Black smashes Solomon's face in with a brick, what I was thinking was "Where the heck did that brick come from?" Honestly. It's not like there's a bunch of loose bricks lying in the streets of New York for people to brain eachother with.
They did crash on the walkway, the brick must've went loose from it or something, I believe. Pedro9basket (talk) 08:57, November 24, 2011 (UTC)
I keep thinking "he's british" because of the name (sounds British to me anyways -.-), but the accent clearly does not fit the bill. Anyone able to determine it? PresidentEden78 07:21, November 26, 2011 (UTC)
Solomon is actually a Hebrew name. Йура 22:55, December 10, 2011 (UTC)
The novel, Battlefield 3: The Russian, says that Solomon is actually from the Middle East, though it does not specify which nation. 71.23.248.189 22:42, December 10, 2011 (UTC)Mike
Hmm, that could mean he's Israeli, building off Yuri's and your post, anon. But usually they hate anyone Islamic because they are constantly at war with Palestine. I need to get the book though. PresidentEden78 05:32, December 11, 2011 (UTC)
Well "Solomon" is an anglicanization of the Hebrew name. The modern Hebrew name is Shlomo. It's possible he's Arabic (or islamic), though, since "Solomon" is also a possible anglicanization of "Sauleiman". Йура 05:34, December 11, 2011 (UTC)
Well shit, look at you doing research on name origins and such. I never even though of that... I've been very busy with school though, so must be why I didn't look into it. Maybe the novel eventually tells his origin, unless the anon read it all and it was never stated. Regardless, that could be worth adding to trivia. PresidentEden78 05:40, December 11, 2011 (UTC)
Well we need confirmation of his origins first ._. Йура 05:42, December 11, 2011 (UTC)