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Anshel Pfeffer

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Anshel Pfeffer,

Anshel Pfeffer

Analysis

Bombing back in Israel, but not as we knew it

March 24, 2011 12:46
Trauma: a woman is treated after the Jerusalem attack on Wednesday
2 min read

The horrific bombing of Jerusalem's central bus station this week that killed a 59-year-old woman and wounded 30 others was the first major terror attack on Israel's capital in almost three years.

"It was nothing like the big suicide bombings of the past decade," said one security official on the scene. "A small bomb, weighing less than two kilograms was left behind in a bag. There are no hallmarks here of the terror networks we faced then."

The bombing was almost prevented. One of the workers at the kiosk behind the bus stop was just calling the police to report a suspicious bag when the bomb went off. If two full buses had not just pulled in, casualties would have been much lower.

Three weeks ago, a municipal worker lost part of his hand when a pipe-bomb left in a rubbish bin in southern Jerusalem went off. The incident was barely reported and Wednesday's blast would not have attracted much more coverage if the bomb had been discovered in time or exploded with only a few casualties.