DAMASCUS, Syria —
Two bombs attached to a bus carrying Syrian troops exploded in Damascus during the morning rush hour Wednesday, killing 14 people and wounding others, a military official said.
It was the deadliest attack in the Syrian capital in several years, and an especially rare event since government troops in 2018 captured suburbs once held by insurgents in Syria’s decade-long conflict.
State media had earlier described the attack as a roadside bombing. But an unnamed Syrian military official said the explosions were caused by bombs that had been earlier attached to the vehicle’s exterior. A third bomb fell from the bus and was dismantled by troops after the two initial explosions, the official said.
No one immediately claimed responsibility for the attack, but insurgents and jihadists still reside within the country’s borders and seek the overthrow of President Bashar Assad.
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It was unclear if the bombs were detonated from a distance or if they had been timed to go off. The military official, quoted in state media, said the bombs went off shortly before 7 a.m. local time. It was not immediately clear if all the dead were bus passengers.
The explosion went off at a busy junction near a main bus transfer point under a bridge known as President’s Bridge. Commuters converge on the area and head out to different parts of Damascus and its suburbs.
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Syrian state TV showed footage of the charred bus, saying the blasts occurred as people headed to work and school. Images showed smoke from the extinguished bus rising as soldiers hosed down the charred vehicle. A puddle of water formed under the bridge, where pictures of Assad were posted on the walls.
Over an hour after the blast occurred, workers cleared the scene of the explosion, and the burned-out bus was removed.
“It is a cowardly act,” Damascus police commander Maj. Gen. Hussein Jumaa told state TV, adding that police had cordoned off the area immediately and made sure there were no more bombs.
Assad’s forces now control much of Syria after military help from allies Russia and Iran helped tip the balance of power in his favor.
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On Nov. 13, 1970, Hafez Assad, a young career air force officer, took power in Syria in a bloodless coup, the latest in a succession of military takeovers since independence from France in 1946.
One of the last major explosions to hit Damascus was in 2017, when suicide bombers struck a judicial office building and a restaurant, killing nearly 60 people. The attacks were claimed by Islamic State militants. The extremist organization lost its territorial gains in Syria in 2019, but it continues to represent a threat with sleeper cells, mostly hiding in Syria’s expansive desert.
Some territories are still held by armed rebels in the country’s north, where U.S. and Turkish forces are also deployed.
Syria’s civil war, which began in March 2011, has left more than 350,000 people dead and displaced half the country’s population, including 5 million who are refugees abroad.
In August, Syria’s state media said a short circuit triggered an explosion in the gas tank of a bus carrying soldiers, killing one and wounding three.