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U.S. Embassy convoy attacked in Afghanistan

A car bomb exploded next to a U.S. Embassy convoy on a busy road in Kabul on Monday, setting an embassy SUV on fire, officials said.
A U.S. security guard stands near the still burning vehicle of a suicide attacker in Kabul, Afghanistan, on Monday. The car bomb exploded next to a U.S. Embassy convoy, pushing an embassy SUV across the road and setting it on fire, officials said.
A U.S. security guard stands near the still burning vehicle of a suicide attacker in Kabul, Afghanistan, on Monday. The car bomb exploded next to a U.S. Embassy convoy, pushing an embassy SUV across the road and setting it on fire, officials said.Musadeq Sadeq / AP
/ Source: The Associated Press

A car bomb exploded next to a U.S. Embassy convoy on a busy road in Kabul on Monday, setting an embassy SUV on fire, officials said.

Joe Mellott, a spokesman for the U.S. Embassy, said several people in the convoy were wounded, one seriously. He said the U.S. ambassador was not in the convoy.

An initial alert over an embassy warning system said: “A U.S. Embassy convoy was struck by a suicide bomber in the vicinity of the U.S. Embassy,” according to an Associated Press reporter who heard the alert over the phone.

Mellott said the warning was initial incoming information and it wasn’t immediately clear if it was a suicide bomber who carried out the attack.

The bombing took place about 2 miles from the embassy on a road often targeted in bombings and rocket attacks. The road leads out of Kabul and to the U.S. base at Bagram.

First aid was administered to two people in the three-vehicle convoy, according to an AP reporter who witnessed the blast.

U.S. Embassy security teams prevented Afghan police, NATO soldiers and journalists from getting close to the vehicles, the AP reporter said.

Late last month, a suicide bomber killed 23 people outside the U.S. base at Bagram during a visit by Vice President Dick Cheney.