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4 killed as
attack on US embassy in Syria foiled
DAMASCUS—Gunmen have launched a brazen daylight assault on the US
embassy in Damascus, using grenades, automatic weapons and an
explosives-laden van in a foiled "terror" attack that has left four
people dead.
Three assailants and a member of Syria's anti-terror squad were killed
Tuesday in a shootout during the bid to storm the embassy, which came
just a day after the fifth anniversary of the September 11 attacks on
the United States in 2001.
"The terrorist attack failed. It did not achieve the objectives of the
criminals responsible," Interior Minister General Bassam Abdel Majid
during a visit to the scene of the attack, the state news agency SANA
reported.
He said three "terrorists" were killed and one was wounded in clashes
with Syrian forces charged with protecting the embassy, located in the
high-security diplomatic quarter of the capital.
There was no immediate claim of responsibility.
The state news agency SANA also said an anti-terror operative was killed
and another 14 people wounded, including an embassy guard and passers-by
in the area, which is close to the offices of Syrian President Bashar
al-Assad.
"All embassy personnel and their family members are safe," the US
embassy said in a statement, adding that the local guard was injured by
gunfire and was in stable condition.
Chinese state media said a Chinese diplomat had been slightly injured by
a stray bullet.
It was the latest in a series of deadly attacks against US diplomatic
missions across the globe, the most recent being in March 2006 in
Pakistan.
"Home-made bombs and automatic weapons were used during the terrorist
attack," SANA said, adding that security forces also thwarted a car bomb
attack, defusing explosives packed into a van parked in front of the
mission by assailants who fled and were gunned down.
Television footage from the scene showed a burnt-out car and bloodstains
on the pavement outside the white walled high-security compound, and a
white van packed with gas bottles.
Abdel Majid said the initial investigation had found that the attackers
had used stolen cars.
"The Syrian government has pledged full security cooperation," the US
embassy said, adding that its charge d'affaires Michael Corbin, the
highest US official in Damascus, had met the Syrian interior minister at
the scene.
Although the attackers failed to penetrate the high barbed-wire-topped
walls of the compound, one reinforced glass window near an entrance door
was pierced by a bullet.
The blasts in the Abu Remmaneh district, where the US and several other
foreign missions are located, sent a plume of thick black smoke into the
air. The entire area was cordoned off by Syrian security forces.
Witnesses said two attackers had sought refuge in a nearby building but
were pursued and gunned down by security forces.
"I heard gunfire at about 9:45 am (0645 GMT) and then one of my
employees called me as I was heading to work and told me to go back
home," said a local resident.
"He saw a car drive up the street toward the embassy. The vehicle was
intercepted by security officers and a gunbattle ensued. The occupants
of the vehicle threw grenades out the window toward the embassy and
other buildings."
In Washington, the US State Department confirmed the attack.
"We can confirm reports of an attack on our embassy in Damascus by
unknown assailants. The event appears to be over. Local authorities have
responded and are on the scene," spokesman Curtis Cooper said.
The incident came just a day after the fifth anniversary of the
September 11 attacks by the Al-Qaeda network of terror mastermind Osama
bin Laden.
On Monday, bin Laden's number two Ayman al-Zawahiri warned that the Gulf
and Israel would be the next targets of Al-Qaeda in a video message.
Relations between Damascus and Washington have been strained over Iraq,
Lebanon and Syria's support for Palestinian militants opposed to the
peace process with Israel.
The attack came four weeks after the end of Israel's month-long war in
Lebanon against the Syrian-backed Shiite militant group Hezbollah.
The United States has come under fire in the Arab world for its staunch
support of Israel and its failure to call for a rapid ceasefire in the
conflict, which left more than 1,200 people dead in Lebanon
alone.—Agencies |