Belfast on 21st July 1972 will always be remembered as a black day for those covering the history of the troubles in Northern Ireland, for it is the day that the Provisional Irish Republican Army (IRA) set a precedent which even today is the curse of all urban conflict: The deadly car bomb
The most eerie terrorist attack in Nice, where heavy trucks rushed into the crowds in southern Franc...
When the army deployed to Northern Ireland in 1969 it was unprepared for the intensive bombing campa...
At 3:30 pm August 15, 1998, the quiet market town of Omagh was shattered by the explosion of a 500-p...
Belfast bomb attacks: public should view them in the same light as Dublin bombs says De Rossa
The attempted double car bombing of West London was different for a number of reasons. And the media...
The Irish Republican Army (IRA) took its campaign of terror to England in July and August 1973. Mem...
THE TWO car bombs discovered in London and the third used to attack an airport terminal in Glasgow o...
This Trends article discusses multiple political psychological aspects of the August 29, 2003 car bo...
This article serves as a short preview to the history of roadblocks (road obstacles), and also as an...
Though often overlooked in recent years, terrorism related to Northern Ireland is still a possible ...
After the Glasgow airport carbomb attack the media has now gone on to a war footing. The relatively ...
In his August 22, 2018 message to supporters of the Islamic State of Iraq and [greater] Syria (ISIS)...
Thursday’s attacks on London’s tube network and on a double-decker bus in Hackney bear the hallmarks...
This paper marks year marks the 25th anniversary of the founding of Pool Re. In an era dominated by ...
The events of September 11 2001 in New York and Washington, and of July 7 2005 in London, have usher...
The most eerie terrorist attack in Nice, where heavy trucks rushed into the crowds in southern Franc...
When the army deployed to Northern Ireland in 1969 it was unprepared for the intensive bombing campa...
At 3:30 pm August 15, 1998, the quiet market town of Omagh was shattered by the explosion of a 500-p...
Belfast bomb attacks: public should view them in the same light as Dublin bombs says De Rossa
The attempted double car bombing of West London was different for a number of reasons. And the media...
The Irish Republican Army (IRA) took its campaign of terror to England in July and August 1973. Mem...
THE TWO car bombs discovered in London and the third used to attack an airport terminal in Glasgow o...
This Trends article discusses multiple political psychological aspects of the August 29, 2003 car bo...
This article serves as a short preview to the history of roadblocks (road obstacles), and also as an...
Though often overlooked in recent years, terrorism related to Northern Ireland is still a possible ...
After the Glasgow airport carbomb attack the media has now gone on to a war footing. The relatively ...
In his August 22, 2018 message to supporters of the Islamic State of Iraq and [greater] Syria (ISIS)...
Thursday’s attacks on London’s tube network and on a double-decker bus in Hackney bear the hallmarks...
This paper marks year marks the 25th anniversary of the founding of Pool Re. In an era dominated by ...
The events of September 11 2001 in New York and Washington, and of July 7 2005 in London, have usher...
The most eerie terrorist attack in Nice, where heavy trucks rushed into the crowds in southern Franc...
When the army deployed to Northern Ireland in 1969 it was unprepared for the intensive bombing campa...
At 3:30 pm August 15, 1998, the quiet market town of Omagh was shattered by the explosion of a 500-p...