Spain Train Bombings Fast Facts
Spain Train Bombings Fast Facts - CNN
Read CNN's Fast Facts about the March 2004 bombings of commuter trains in Spain, which killed 193 people and injured more than 1800.
Madrid train bombings of 2004 | Description & Facts - Britannica
Madrid train bombings of 2004, coordinated near-simultaneous attacks targeting commuter trains in Madrid on March 11, 2004.
The 3/11 Madrid Bombings: An Assessment After 5 Years
Conventional wisdom about the 3/11 attacks is that it was a local, isolated terrorist cell at work. But the character of the attacks suggest Islamic ...
2004 Madrid train bombings - Wikipedia
The 2004 Madrid train bombings were a series of coordinated, nearly simultaneous bombings against the Cercanías commuter train system of Madrid, Spain, ...
Incident Summary for GTDID: 200403110003 - START.umd.edu
03/11/2004: At 7:41 am local time, two bombs exploded in the fourth and fifth carriages of a train at El Pozo station in Madrid, Spain. The attack was a part of ...
Incident Summary for GTDID: 200403110004 - START.umd.edu
03/11/2004: At 7:42 am local time, a bomb exploded on the fourth carriage of a train passing through the Santa Eugenia station in Madrid, Spain. At least 17 ...
A timeline of major events is provided in Figure 1. I. Pre-Arrest. Events. A. The Madrid Train Bombings and the Recovery of ...
Atocha Station | station, Madrid, Spain - Britannica
Other articles where Atocha Station is discussed: Madrid train bombings of 2004: …four trains in and around Atocha Station in the city's ...
Jihadist Radicalization and the 2004 Madrid Bombing Network
The terrorist network responsible for the March 11, 2004 attacks in Madrid was assembled between March 2002 and November 2003.
11 March 2004: The terrorist bomb explosions in Madrid, Spain – an ...
At 07:39 on 11 March 2004, 10 terrorist bomb explosions occurred almost simultaneously in four commuter trains in Madrid, Spain, killing 177 people ...
Spain remembers Madrid train bombings 10 years on - BBC News
Spain remembers those who died in the country's worst terror attack, but many survivors also remember the actions of the government in the ...
Remembering Victims of Terrorism: growing stronger together - EEAS
On 11 March 2004, ten bombs exploded almost simultaneously aboard four commuter trains in Madrid (Spain), killing 193 people and injuring around 2000.
Spanish and European officials mark the 20th anniversary of the ...
King Felipe VI of Spain says victims of terror attacks are a symbol of the constant need to guard freedom and the rule of law against ...
The role of psycho-political variables in the reactions to March 11 ...
March 11, 2004, dramatically affected Spaniards' lives. On that day, Madrid suffered a terrorist attack. Several bombs were placed in a train that travelled ...
Madrid train bombings: An open wound, twenty years on - Revisited
It was one of Spain's deadliest terrorist attacks in history. On the morning of March 11, 2004, ten bombs exploded almost simultaneously at ...
PTSD and Depression After the Madrid March 11 Train Bombings
The March 11, 2004, train bombings in Madrid, Spain, caused the largest loss of life from a single terrorist attack in modern European history. We used a ...
Terrorists bomb trains in Madrid | March 11, 2004 | HISTORY
Three other bombs did not detonate as planned and were later found intact. Many in Spain and around the world saw the attacks as retaliation for ...
Madrid train bombings: An open wound, twenty years on - YouTube
It was one of Spain's deadliest terrorist attacks in history. On the morning of March 11, 2004, ten bombs exploded almost simultaneously at ...
FACTBOX-The Madrid train bombings and what happened next
Ten bombs hidden in sports bags exploded on four packed commuter trains between 7:37 and 7:40 am. One train was at Madrid's main Atocha station.
Why did the Madrid train bombings divide, not unite Spaniards?
When 11-M occurred, Spaniards sought to explain the terrorist bombings using familiar concepts, since they could not do so using unfamiliar ...