A Palestinian suicide attacker exploded a powerful car bomb next to an Israeli bus yesterday, igniting an inferno and killing at least 16 people in a major setback to international peace efforts.
Hours after the bombing, Israeli tanks rolled into Jenin and helicopters fired at targets in the West Bank city regarded by Israel as a stronghold of militants, Palestinian witnesses said. The Israeli army called the incursion a "routine patrol."
The blast in northern Israel claimed the highest number of Israeli casualties of any attack since the end early last month of a crushing six-week offensive through the West Bank, launched in response to a wave of suicide bombings.
The militant Palestinian group Islamic Jihad said it carried out the bombing near Megiddo, the Hebrew name for Armageddon, to coincide with the 35th anniversary of the 1967 Middle East war in which Israel seized the West Bank and Gaza Strip.
"A seeker of martyrdom ... from the Jerusalem Brigades detonated an explosives-laden car that he drove near a Zionist bus near Megiddo junction," the group said in a statement.
The Palestinian Authority condemned the bombing and rejected Israel's charge that Palestinian President Yasser Arafat was responsible for the attack.
The bloodshed followed two days of talks between US CIA Director George Tenet and Palestinian and Israeli leaders intended to initiate Palestinian Authority reforms to help stop suicide attacks.
The car blew up during the morning rush hour. The bus was carrying civilians and soldiers from Tel Aviv to Tiberias by the Sea of Galilee.
A chunk of mangled metal was all that remained of the car and the bus. The explosion sprayed body parts and debris for hundreds of metres across a main highway.
A correspondent for Israel's Army Radio described a couple locked in a death embrace, their charred bodies hanging from one of the bus's rear windows.
Police said at least 16 people were killed in the blast, a few kilometers from the West Bank.
The use of a car bomb marked a return to a tactic employed only sporadically by militants. Dozens of suicide bombers with explosives strapped to their bodies have been dispatched to Israel since a Palestinian uprising against Israeli occupation began in September 2000.
"I saw a vehicle just in front of us. Then I heard the explosion and everything was fire and smoke," said Anton Borodnik, a soldier who had been travelling on the bus with his mother, aunt and girlfriend.
"I kicked the door open with another soldier. I pulled my girlfriend off and then went back and pulled my mother off and then went back and pulled my aunt off," he said in hospital.
The bombing followed a resurgence of Palestinian suicide attacks in the wake of the military offensive in the West Bank that Israel said was intended to halt such violence.
Israeli forces now carry out almost daily raids into Palestinian cities and towns, detaining suspected militants.
The blast was only a few kilometers from Jenin, scene of some of the heaviest fighting of the recent Israeli military offensive.
Israel's security Cabinet later met for three hours in a session scheduled before the blast. No decisions were announced and political sources said the forum was likely to reconvene later in the day to consider military retaliation plans.
An official in Prime Minister Ariel Sharon's office called the bombing "another cowardly act of terror by the Palestinians, showing again that murder and the Palestinian Authority are indistinguishable."



