Fernando Reinares is director of the Program on Violent Radicalization and Global Terrorism at the Elcano Royal Institute, as well as professor of political science and security studies at Universidad Rey Juan Carlos, both in Madrid. He is also an adjunct professor at Georgetown University and a Global Fellow of the Wilson Center. Reinares coedited, with Bruce Hoffman, The Evolution of the Global Terrorist Threat: From 9/11 to Osama bin Laden's Death (Columbia, 2014). The Association of 3/11 Terrorism Victims awarded him the Prize for Memory and Peace in 2022 in honor of his research on the attacks.
The most rigorous book on the 2004 Madrid train bombings. -- Jorge Dezcallar, former director of Centro Nacional de Inteligencia (CNI), Spain's intelligence service Fernando Reinares likely has written the definitive book on the origins of March 11. * El Pais * The most clear-headed and well-documented book on March 11. * El Mundo * Al-Qaeda's Revenge is one of the most important books written on the subject of radical Islamic terrorism in Europe and North America since 9/11. No other book has taken such an in-depth look at the way a plot was conceived and how a conspiracy of plotters came together to execute their plan. This kind of patient reconstruction of a terror attack is a model for intelligence and security services around the world to emulate to better understand the challenges they face. * from the foreword by Bruce Riedel, director of the Intelligence Project, Brookings Institution * This book will help educate experts and nonexperts about the operational methods of terrorist organizations. In particular it establishes parallels and comparisons with the September 11 attacks and the July 2005 London attacks. * Luis Bitencourt, National Defense University * An impressive piece of research, the implications of which stretch well beyond a single event more than a dozen years ago. * The Economist * Al-Qaeda's Revenge is a thoroughly researched and well-presented case study on the evolution of the 3/11 network. * Small Wars Journal * This is a must-read for counterterrorism authorities and concerned citizens alike. * Foreign Affairs * An excellent, well-sourced monograph analyzing the March 11, 2004 terrorist attacks on four commuter trains in Madrid, Spain. * Parameters * Helps[s] to cast a clearer light on the past and its links to the present, and how persistent and dangerous the terrorist threat that we face from violent Islamic groups, and Al-Qaeda in particular, remains. * Rusi Journal * Authoritative....Reinares brings his formidable investigative skills to prove that the 3-11 attacks were not the work of home-grown extremists enraged by Spanish involvement in the Iraq war. * Terrorism and Political Violence * High marks for the depth of research, the quality of analysis, and the accuracy of its often complex results. * Intelligence Analysis and Reporting * Ultimately, Reinares makes his case using criminal linkages, established networks, and an apparent revenge motive...Reinares's work tells us what it truly was with considerable conviction. * MCU Journal * The book by Prof. Reinares constitutes the definitive work on the 11 March bombings. * Terrorism and Political Violence *