KARACHI, Pakistan (AP) - An attacker crashed a -laden vehicle into a guard post outside the U.S. Consulate in Karachi on Friday, himself and at least 10 others and injuring 45.
The massive blast incinerated a dozen cars, blew a 10-foot-wide hole in the compound wall and sent debris flying a half-mile.
No Americans were believed killed, but one U.S. Marine and five Pakistani employees in the consulate were slightly injured. The consulate has been operating with a skeleton staff since nonessential workers were sent home last month because of concerns for their safety.
In Washington, early U.S. suspicion centered on al-Qaida and affiliated Pakistani Islamic extremist groups, but officials said they had no direct evidence of who was responsible. Several Pakistani groups have ties to al-Qaida, but could have conducted the attack without the sanction of Osama bin Laden ( news - web sites)'s organization.
U.S. State Department officials said they would re-evaluate how many American personnel to keep in Pakistan.
"It's a deplorable act of ism and our condolences go to the families of the victims, and we wish a full and speedy recovery to all those injured," White House spokesman Sean McCormack said.
Some of the victims were blown apart, making it difficult to determine exactly how many people were killed.
But Dr. Hafiz Athar, a police surgeon, said 11 people were killed, including 10 identified by relatives or colleagues. The other set of remains was believed to be the er.
The victims included four Pakistani police constables, a male passer-by, the er and four women, police said. Three of the women had just finished a driver's education course and were getting their licenses.
The blast occurred less than a mile from the site where 11 French engineers and three others were killed in a ing last month. It also came on the heels of a visit to Pakistan by U.S. Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld, who left the country Thursday.
No one claimed responsibility, but al-Qaida fugitives have taken refuge in Pakistan since the collapse of Taliban rule in neighboring Afghanistan ( news - web sites).
Police said the was concealed in a white vehicle, believed to be a Suzuki van, that the driver crashed into a police kiosk at the southern end of the consulate at 11:08 a.m. (1:08 a.m. EDT).
The vehicle exploded after careering into one of the 3-foot-high, sand-filled concrete security barriers that encircle the compound. The barriers have gaps only wide enough to walk between.
The blast, heard several miles away, disintegrated the barrier, along with a 10-foot-wide section of the 10-foot-high, steel-reinforced wall behind it. Another barrier inside the wall was reduced to rubble, part of a huge tree was blown away, and windows in the four-story consulate were shattered.