http://today.reuters.co.uk/news/articlenews.aspx?type=topNews&storyID=2006-0
9-12T103149Z_01_L12741661_RTRUKOC_0_UK-SYRIA.xml

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Car bomb attack on U.S. embassy in Damascus fails
Tue Sep 12, 2006 11:31 AM BST
By Khaled Yacoub Oweis
DAMASCUS (Reuters) - Four men shouting religious slogans tried to blow up
the U.S. embassy in Damascus on Tuesday but their car bomb failed to go off
and Syrian security guards killed three of them in a shootout.
No American diplomats were hurt in the assault, a Syrian official said.
Syrian-U.S. relations have been tense for many years, mainly over Syria's
role in Lebanon, the Middle East conflict and Iraq, and its support of
militant groups in the region.
The official news agency SANA said three attackers had been killed and a
fourth wounded. A Syrian official said earlier that all four assailants had
died.
A witness said at least one Syrian security guard had been killed by the
attackers, who had been shouting Islamic slogans.
"I saw two men in plain clothes and armed with grenades and automatic
weapons," said Ayman Abdel-Nour, a Syrian political commentator who was in
the area. "They ran towards the compound shouting religious slogans while
firing their automatic rifles."
Syrian state television said the attackers had tried but failed to detonate
a car bomb.
Television footage of the scene showed a van packed with gas canisters and
detonators taped to them, as well as bloodstains on the pavement and several
damaged vehicles, including a white bullet-riddled car that a truck was
preparing to haul away.
The embassy flag was flying at half-mast, one day after the fifth
anniversary of the September 11 al Qaeda attacks on the United States.
The Rawda area where the attack occurred is one of the most heavily guarded
districts in the Syrian capital. It houses security installations and the
homes of government officials.
Hours later, the area remained sealed, with sharpshooters deployed on
rooftops and top security officials at the scene.
Interior Minister Bassam Abdel Majid told state television an investigation
was under way.
Security officials said the assailants' arsenal included rocket-propelled
grenades. It was not known if they had fired them during the mid-morning
gunbattle in central Damascus.
U.S. CONFIRMS ATTACK
In Washington, State Department spokesman Gonzalo Gallegos said: "We can
confirm reports of an attack on our embassy in Damascus by unknown
assailants. The event appears to be over."
There was no word on the identity of the attackers, but Syrian forces have
clashed with Islamist militants several times in recent months, often during
raids to arrest them.
In June, four gunmen and a guard were killed when Syrian security forces
said they had foiled an attack by Islamist militants near the premises of
state-run television in Damascus.
The United States recalled its ambassador from Syria in February 2005,
expressing "profound outrage" over the assassination of Lebanon's former
Prime Minister Rafik al-Hariri in Beirut. Washington blames Syria for that
killing. Damascus denies any involvement.
The United States increased its criticism of Syria during Israel's 34-day
war in July and August with Lebanon's Hizbollah guerrillas, who are
supported by Syria and Iran.
Syria, accused by Washington of helping insurgents in Iraq and backing
Hizbollah and the Palestinian Hamas movement, blames the rise of militancy
in the region on U.S. policies such as the Iraq war and U.S. support for
Israel.
In the early 1980s, Syria crushed an armed revolt led by the Muslim
Brotherhood movement.
The embassy assault occurred one day after the fifth anniversary of the
September 11 attacks on the United States by Osama bin Laden's al-Qaeda.

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