Al-Zarqawi's group claims Jordan terror blasts

Nearly simultaneous suicide attacks kill at least 56

AMMAN, Jordan (CNN) -- Al Qaeda in Iraq, a group led by wanted 
militant Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, is claiming responsibility for three 
suicide bombings in hotels in Amman, Jordan, according to a posting 
on a Web site Thursday.

At least 56 people were killed in the attacks Wednesday at the Grand 
Hyatt, Radisson and Days Inn hotels. Another 93 people were wounded.

The claim was made on a Web site used by the group. Its authenticity 
cannot be verified by CNN.

A Jordanian official earlier had said al-Zarqawi was a "prime 
suspect" in the terror bombings.

Several of those killed in the hotel blasts were Palestinian 
officials.

The blasts occurred sequentially at the Radisson, Grand Hyatt and 
Days Inn hotels between 9 p.m. and 10 p.m. (2 p.m. and 3 p.m. ET) 
Wednesday. The three international hotels are within a few hundred 
yards of each other.

A senior Jordanian intelligence official told CNN that all of the 
bombs were explosive belts worn by suicide attackers. He said 
officials were having a difficult time identifying the bombers 
because of the condition of the bodies.

No vehicles were involved in any of the attacks, he said. Earlier, 
officials reported that the Days Inn blast was caused by a suicide 
car bomb.

At the Days Inn, he said, the bomber walked into the hotel bar, where 
he attempted to detonate his belt but failed. He left the hotel and 
returned 15 minutes later, successfully detonating just inside the 
hotel. He had a "distinctly non-Jordanian accent," the official said.

At the Grand Hyatt, the bomber entered the hotel lobby, walked toward 
the bar and set off his bomb.

The largest of the three bombings targeted a wedding celebration 
inside a hotel banquet room.

Deputy Prime Minister Marwan Muasher said that blast, at the 
Radisson, was set off by a suicide bomber wearing a belt packed with 
explosives.

"Most of the casualties occurred at that wedding party. And most of 
them, if not all, were Jordanian," he told CNN.

Randa Jaaqoub told CNN she was in the lobby of the Grand Hyatt with 
her fiance when that blast occurred.

"Everything just exploded, and we had fire and smoke all over," the 
Jordanian American from Chicago said. "We saw the bodies and blood 
all over."

Though security forces sealed off the three hotels almost immediately 
after the attacks, a reporter for the Jordanian Times, Rana Husseini, 
gained entrance to the Radisson about 20 minutes after the explosion 
there.

The lobby and wedding hall were "totally destroyed," she said, with 
shattered glass all over the floor.

"There were tables and chairs turned over, there was blood on the 
chairs, it was really a horrific scene." (Watch eyewitness accounts --
 2:46)

The groom said the blast took place as he and his fiancee were 
entering the wedding hall. He lost as many as 10 of his relatives, 
including his father, he said. No Westerners were at the party, he 
said.

"This is not Islam," he said. "This is a terrorist fighting our 
capital."

An emergency Cabinet meeting was convened shortly after the 
explosions.

"This is something that Jordan is not used to," Muasher said, taking 
a break from the meeting. "Obviously, we are not happy about what 
happened and we are going to take whatever measures we can to guard 
against these terrorist activities."

Muasher pointed out then that the Jordanian-born al-Zarqawi, the most-
wanted terrorist in Iraq, was among the suspects.

Jordanian King Abdullah II issued a statement condemning the attacks 
and saying that Jordan "will be resilient."

Karim Kawar, the Jordanian ambassador to the United States, said the 
attacks have "come as a shock to all of us."

"We try to be as vigilant as possible but, at the end of the day, 
we're all vulnerable to such attacks," he said in Washington.

In a written statement, Jordanian House Speaker Abdel Hadi Majali 
called the blasts "a criminal terrorist act."

Asked whether al Qaeda may have been behind them, he said, "There is 
definitely an organization behind these attacks. Al Qaeda tried 
before and we foiled some attacks and this could be one of those 
times when they were able to bypass our security forces." (Watch the 
aftermath of the blasts and how the focus turns to al Qaeda -- 1:54

Palestinian officials among dead
Jordanian Embassy officials in Washington said the blasts came 
without warning, and no Jordanian government officials were among the 
casualties.

Officials from other governments, however, were among the dead. Four 
Palestinians, including Maj. Gen. Bashir Nafeh, head of Palestinian 
military intelligence, died in the blast at the Grand Hyatt, 
according to chief Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erakat. Also killed 
was Col. Abed Allun; Jihad Fattouh, the brother of the Palestinian 
parliament speaker; and Mosab Khoma, Erakat said. The four were on 
their way back from Cairo, Egypt, he said, adding that he condemned 
the attack in the strongest terms possible.

In addition, three Chinese were killed and one wounded in the 
attacks, according to the Chinese news agency Xinhua, which cited a 
press release on the Chinese Foreign Ministry's Web site. They were 
members of a delegation from China's University of National Defense 
and were staying at one of the hotels, according to the report. Which 
hotel was not specified.

Jordanian Prime Minister Adnan Badran told Jordanian television that 
government offices and schools would be closed Thursday.

'Cowardly' attacks condemned
Though the hotels cater to international travelers, it was not clear 
whether foreigners were targeted. The Hyatt is the most expensive, 
followed by the Radisson and then the Days Inn, but all three are 
commonly used by Jordanians, said a Westerner who has lived in Jordan 
for more than a year.

In Washington, a spokesman for the White House said the 
administration knew of no U.S. casualties.

President Bush called the attacks "cowardly" and "barbaric."

The State Department had issued no recent travel warnings for 
Americans visiting Jordan.

The Radisson Hotel was the target of a 1999 plot before the 
millennium celebrations, but Jordanian law enforcement broke up the 
plot.

After Wednesday's attack, Radisson said in a statement: "We are 
saddened by this tragic incident and are mobilizing to clarify the 
facts and assist those who have been impacted."

Hyatt said its management team is "working to assure the safety and 
relocation of guests," given that authorities had evacuated the 
targeted hotels.

Days Inn issued a statement saying four of its guests were wounded, 
three of them seriously, but no one had died.

Jordan, considered a key Arab ally of the United States, helps train 
Iraqi troops and hosts the headquarters of international aid agencies 
that pulled relief workers out of Iraq as the insurgency deepened 
there.

It is also the homeland of al-Zarqawi, the wanted terrorist in Iraq 
who has a $25 million reward posted for his head.

In August, al-Zarqawi's group claimed responsibility for rocket 
attacks that targeted but missed two U.S. warships in the Jordanian 
Red Sea port of Aqaba.

Jordanian authorities said the attackers kept insurgent leaders in 
Iraq informed of their progress.
 

  
 
  
 

  
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