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KABUL, Afghanistan — In a series of audacious strikes on the eve of the new U.S. special envoy’s scheduled arrival in Afghanistan, Taliban gunmen and suicide bombers Wednesday staged synchronized raids on three government buildings in the heart of Kabul, killing at least 20 people and injuring scores of others.

Prolonged bursts of gunfire rattled through city streets. Some terrified government workers jumped out second-story windows to escape. At the Justice Ministry, the minister was trapped for a time in his office as fighting raged in corridors.

The attacks, which came days after the Afghan government said it had cracked a suicide-bombing ring active in the capital for nearly two years, underscored militants’ continuing ability to penetrate even extremely heavy security surrounding official installations.

The Obama administration, with NATO allies, is struggling to put together a new strategy for Afghanistan, where Islamic insurgents are gaining ground and many Afghans are disillusioned by the pervasive insecurity that plagues their daily lives. This week, the White House said it plans to complete an overhaul of policy on Afghanistan and Pakistan by April; American military commanders, meanwhile, have said they could send an additional 30,000 troops to the troubled country this year, nearly doubling the U.S. contingent.

Seven years after the U.S.-led invasion that toppled the Taliban, Kabul’s inner districts are a tangle of blast walls and security checkpoints. But insurgents apparently managed to send a squad of at least eight assailants, clad in suicide vests and toting assault rifles, into some of the city’s most secure areas to carry out Wednesday’s attacks, officials acknowledged.

Some of the fighting took place a short distance from the presidential palace, where Richard Holbrooke, the new American special envoy to the region, is likely to visit. Holbrooke’s schedule was not announced for security reasons, but Afghan officials had said he was expected in Kabul today.

In recent days, Holbrooke has been in Pak istan, where he traveled by helicopter Wednesday to the lawless tribal areas to see the positions of Pakistani troops battling the Taliban on their side of the Afghan-Pakistan border.

While Holbrooke was visiting Peshawar, the main city in Pakistan’s troubled northwest, suspected insurgents killed a lawmaker from a secular party. The member of parliament, Alam Zeb Khan of the Awami National Party, was fatally injured when his vehicle passed by a motorcycle containing a remote-controlled bomb..

In Afghanistan, securing the provinces adjoining Kabul has become a high priority for Western military commanders.

A Taliban spokesman, Zabiullah Mujahid, said the Kabul attacks were meant to avenge the treatment of captured insurgents allegedly tortured in prison.

Afghan officials claimed the attacks were masterminded in Pakistan. Interior Minister Mohamad Hanif Atmar said that just before the assault, the gunmen sent text messages to a Pakistani handler.

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