Tehran – A car bomb killed 11 members of Iran’s elite Revolutionary Guards on Wednesday in the deadliest attack in years near the Pakistani border, and Iran accused the U.S. of backing militants to destabilize the country.
A Sunni Muslim militant group called Jundallah, or God’s Brigade, which has been blamed for past attacks on Iranian troops, claimed responsibility for the bombing, according to the semiofficial Fars news agency.
The blast represented a sharp flare-up of violence in the remote southeast corner of Iran, near Pakistan and Afghanistan, that has long been plagued by lawlessness. The area is a key crossing point for opium from Afghanistan and often sees clashes between police and drug gangs.
At the same time, Jundallah has waged a low-level insurgency in the area, led by Abdulmalak Rigi, a member of Iran’s ethnic Baluchi minority, a community that is Sunni Muslim and is present in Pakistan and Afghanistan. Rigi has said his group is fighting for the rights of impoverished Sunnis under Iran’s Shiite government.
An al-Qaeda-linked group of the same name has carried out attacks in Pakistan, but Pakistani officials say it is not connected to the Iranian militants.
Iranian officials blamed “in surgents” and “terrorists” for Wednesday’s bombing – and accused the United States of backing them to sow instability in Iran.
“This was done by a group that gets support from America,” the state-run Islamic Republic News Agency said, quoting unidentified officials.
Wednesday’s bombing took place at about 6:30 a.m. near Zahedan, capital of Sistan-Baluchestan province, when a car packed with explosives pulled to a stop in front of a bus carrying members of the Revolutionary Guards. The car exploded, killing 11 guards and wounding 31, the provincial governor, Hassan Ali Nouri, told IRNA.
He said one attacker was also killed in the blast, and IRNA said others in the car fled just before the bomb went off. Five suspects were arrested, IRNA reported.



