http://www.rockymountainnews.com/drmn/nation/article/0,1299,DRMN_16_4986640,
00.html
 
 

US Embassy in Syria attacked
Updated 9/12/2006 7:46 AM ET
USATODAY

A Marine stands guard Tuesday on the roof of the U.S. embassy in Damascus.

A Marine stands guard Tuesday on the roof of the U.S. embassy in Damascus.

By Louai Beshara, AFP/Getty Images
 
DAMASCUS, Syria (AP) - Islamic militants attempted to storm the U.S. Embassy
in Damascus on Tuesday using automatic rifles, hand grenades and at least
one van rigged with explosives, the government said. Four people were killed
in the brazen attack, including three of the assailants.
No Americans were hurt, and the attackers apparently did not breach the high
walls surrounding the embassy's white compound in the city's diplomatic
neighborhood.
But one of Syria's anti-terrorism forces was killed and at least 11 others
were injured, the country's official news agency reported. The wounded
including a police officer, two Iraqis and seven people employed at nearby
technical workshop.
A Chinese diplomat also was hit in the face by shrapnel and slightly injured
while standing on top of a garage at the Chinese Embassy, China's government
news agency said.
A witness said one Syrian guard outside the embassy also was killed, but the
government did not immediately confirm that. At the embassy in Damascus, as
at most American embassies worldwide, a local guard force patrols outside
the compound's walls while U.S. Marine guards are mostly responsible for
guarding classified documents and fighting off attackers inside the
compound.
Witnesses also said the gunmen tried to throw hand grenades into the embassy
compound, shouting "Allah Akbar!" or "God is great!" It was not clear if any
of the grenades made it over the walls, which are about 8 feet high.
The attack came at a time of high tension between the United States and
Syria over the recent Israeli-Hezbollah war in neighboring Lebanon. In
Damascus there has been increasingly anti-American sentiment.
Syria has seen previous attacks by Islamic militants. In June, Syrian
anti-terrorism police fought Islamic militants near the Defense Ministry in
a gunbattle that killed five people and wounded four.
After Tuesday's attack, pools of blood lay splattered on the sidewalk
outside the embassy, along with a burned car apparently used by the
attackers. A sports utility vehicle with U.S. diplomatic tags had a bullet
hole through its front window, and the glass windows of nearby guard houses
also were shattered.
There were conflicting reports of what happened.
Syrian TV said one car was rigged with explosives but never was detonated by
the attackers. But one witness said a second car did explode, and TV footage
from the scene showed a burned car.
The Syrian Interior Ministry, which is in charge of police, said a fourth
attacker now in detention was wounded in the incident, which it called a
"terrorist attack." The report, carried on state-run television, said
anti-terror units brought "the situation under control" and an investigation
was underway.
In Washington, a State Department spokesman confirmed the attack by "unknown
assailants" but had few details.
"Local authorities have responded and are on the scene," said spokesman
Kurtis Cooper said. He said he had no further information.
A U.S. Embassy statement said the embassy came under armed attack at 10:10
a.m. local time and that all embassy personnel are safe. One Syrian embassy
guard was injured by gunfire and is in a stable condition at a local
hospital, the statement said.
The Embassy's charge d'affairs, Michael Corbin, met with Syrian Interior
Minister Bassam Abdel Maguid at the scene, and spoke by phone with assistant
minister of foreign affairs, Ahmed Arnous, according to the statement.
It said the Syrian government has pledged full security cooperation.
State television said four armed attackers "attempted to storm" the Embassy,
using automatic rifles and hand grenades. Syrian security guards attacked
the gunmen, killing three and wounding a fourth, TV said.
The attackers came in two cars and parked one that was rigged with
explosives in front of the embassy but did not blow it up, state-run TV
reported. Explosive experts dismantled the bomb, it said.
But a witness told The Associated Press that two gunmen stopped a car on the
street in front of the embassy, got out of the car, shot at the Syrian
sentries in front of the building's entrance and then detonated the car.
The witness, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity
of the matter, said the security personnel shot back, and security forces in
the area rushed to the scene.
Television footage showed a delivery van loaded with pipe bombs strapped to
large propane gas canisters outside the Embassy. Had the bombs detonated,
the explosions would have caused massive damage.
The footage also showed the charred remains of a smaller car parked several
feet behind the van.
A Syrian who works at the American Embassy, contacted by telephone, said
there were no U.S. casualties. The employee, who spoke on condition of
anonymity, said the incident started just after 10 a.m.
Damascus has been hit by militant attacks in the past. In April 2004, four
people were killed in a clash between Syrian police and a team of suspected
bombers in the diplomatic quarter of Damascus.
The authorities at that time accused Islamic militants of trying blow up an
explosives-laden car near the Canadian embassy.
Copyright 2006 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may
not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


Syrian TV via APTN



A charred car is seen Tuesday near the U.S. embassy in Damascus, where
gunmen mounted an attack on the diplomatic neighborhood. 

 



 DEADLY DIPLOMACY



A list of attacks against U.S. diplomatic missions around the world, not
including Iraq, since 1998:
August 1998: Coordinated car bombs hit the U.S. embassies in the Kenyan
capital Nairobi and the Tanzanian city of Dar es Salaam. In Nairobi, 213
people die, including 12 Americans, and some 5,000 are injured. In Dar es
Salaam, 11 Africans die and 72 are injured.
March 2002: Bombs explode in two cars parked outside the U.S. embassy in
Lima, killing nine people and injuring 30, just days before a visit to Peru
by President Bush. None of the victims are Americans.
June 2002: A bomb blast kills 12 Pakistanis outside the U.S. consulate in
the Pakistani city of Karachi.
October 2002: A U.S. diplomat is shot dead outside his home in the Jordanian
capital Amman.
February 2003: A lone gunman kills three Pakistani policeman guarding the
U.S. consulate in Karachi. The assailant is also killed.
May 2004: A policeman is killed and 32 other Pakistanis injured in a bomb
attack on the residence of the U.S. consul in Karachi.
July 2004: Four local civilians and three suicide bombers die in Tashkent,
capital of the central Asian state of Uzbekistan, in simultaneous blasts
outside the U.S. and Israeli embassies.
December 2004: Four Saudi national guardsmen die when gunmen attack the U.S.
consulate in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia. Three assailants also die.
March 2006: A suicide bomber kills a U.S. diplomat and three other people
near the consulate in Karachi. The attack comes two days before Bush is due
to visit Pakistan.
Source: AFP
 


AFP/Getty Images



Syrian officials defuse explosives Tuesday that were packed into a vehicle
parked in front of the U.S. embassy in Damascus.
 


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