Norway police don’t rule out terror in US Embassy blast

OSLO — Norwegian police said they weren’t ruling out a terrorism link to an explosion at the US Embassy in Oslo, but the investigation was still in its early stages. The embassy in the Norwegian capital sustained minor damage after the blast in the early hours of Sunday and no one was injured. Norwegian authorities say they are in contact with US diplomats, and an investigation into the incident is now under way. A US State Department spokesperson said they are “aware of an incident at the US Embassy in Oslo” and are investigating. The blast comes at a time of heightened security for US embassies and consulates around the world as Israel and the United States conduct a rapidly escalating bombing campaign against Iran. It is not known whether the blast in Oslo is linked to events in the Middle East. “We’ve determined that an explosion hit the American Embassy,” Oslo police spokesperson Mikael Dellemyr told Norway’s public broadcaster NRK, adding that the blast occurred at the entry to the compound’s consular section. Larsen said it is “natural to view this in the context of the current security situation, and that it is a targeted attack against the American embassy.” “But we have not locked ourselves into just that one hypothesis,” Larsen said at a press conference in Oslo on Sunday. Asked whether the blast was linked to terrorism, Larsen said “one of the hypotheses is that it is terrorism,” but reiterated that police were not “entirely locked into that.” Eyewitnesses reported a loud explosion near the embassy compound in western Oslo around 1 a.m. Anna Gilbo told CNN she was at home with friends when she heard a blast and rushed to the window to see “a cloud of smoke” coming from the building. “I was watching TV and hear a loud bang while the whole house shook. There was a search going on for a while after the explosion which worried my friends and I, but it feels like the threat is over,” she added. Sebastian Toerstad, an 18-year-old school student, recalled “a very thick layer of smoke” on the street as he drove past the embassy at the time of the incident. “There was some damage to the entrance,” he told the Reuters news agency. A search for the perpetrators is ongoing, while no further explosive devices had been found in the area, authorities confirmed. — AgenciesOSLO — Norwegian police said they weren’t ruling out a terrorism link to an explosion at the US Embassy in Oslo, but the investigation was still in its early stages. The embassy in the Norwegian capital sustained minor damage after the blast in the early hours of Sunday and no one was injured. Norwegian authorities say they are in contact with US diplomats, and an investigation into the incident is now under way. A US State Department spokesperson said they are “aware of an incident at the US Embassy in Oslo” and are investigating. The blast comes at a time of heightened security for US embassies and consulates around the world as Israel and the United States conduct a rapidly escalating bombing campaign against Iran. It is not known whether the blast in Oslo is linked to events in the Middle East. “We’ve determined that an explosion hit the American Embassy,” Oslo police spokesperson Mikael Dellemyr told Norway’s public broadcaster NRK, adding that the blast occurred at the entry to the compound’s consular section. Larsen said it is “natural to view this in the context of the current security situation, and that it is a targeted attack against the American embassy.” “But we have not locked ourselves into just that one hypothesis,” Larsen said at a press conference in Oslo on Sunday. Asked whether the blast was linked to terrorism, Larsen said “one of the hypotheses is that it is terrorism,” but reiterated that police were not “entirely locked into that.” Eyewitnesses reported a loud explosion near the embassy compound in western Oslo around 1 a.m. Anna Gilbo told CNN she was at home with friends when she heard a blast and rushed to the window to see “a cloud of smoke” coming from the building. “I was watching TV and hear a loud bang while the whole house shook. There was a search going on for a while after the explosion which worried my friends and I, but it feels like the threat is over,” she added. Sebastian Toerstad, an 18-year-old school student, recalled “a very thick layer of smoke” on the street as he drove past the embassy at the time of the incident. “There was some damage to the entrance,” he told the Reuters news agency. A search for the perpetrators is ongoing, while no further explosive devices had been found in the area, authorities confirmed. — Agencies