(CNN) -- A deadly attack on top Syrian officials Wednesday delivered the harshest blow yet to President Bashar al-Assad's regime, bringing the bloodshed into his inner circle, and even his family.
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Four top officials were killed in an explosion at a national security building in Damascus, and some other people were wounded, state TV reported.
The attack came after several days of growing violence in the capital. At least 102 people were killed across the country on Wednesday, including 34 in Damascus and 11 in suburbs of the city, the opposition Local Coordination Committees of Syria said.
The four officials killed in the bombing were Defense Minister Dawood Rajiha; Deputy Defense Minister Assef Shawkat -- al-Assad's brother-in-law; Hasan Turkmani, al-Assad's security adviser and assistant vice president, and Interior Minister Mohammed Ibrahim al-Shaar, state TV reported.
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The attack, during a meeting of ministers and security officials, was coordinated by several rebel brigades in Damascus, said the deputy head of the opposition Free Syrian Army, Col. Malek al-Kurdi.
The government described it as a suicide bombing. But al-Kurdi said a remote control was used to detonate an explosive device planted inside the meeting room.
Al-Assad quickly named Gen. Fahd Jassem al-Freij as defense minister, state-run news agency SANA said.
Video from a Damascus suburb showed Syrians rejoicing after news spread of the bombing.
Soon the pro-government Shabiha militia took to the streets, attacking some people with knives, shooting others and saying, "this is retribution for what you have done," according to an opposition activist in Damascus, who is going by the name Lena to protect her identity.
There were bodies in the streets around the Yarmouk, a Palestinian refugee camp, and people were too afraid to collect the bodies, Lena said.
"The people are really scared," she said, adding that mosques were blaring the messages "stay in your homes" and "God is great."
A Damascus resident said there were clashes and shootings in the middle of Baghdad Street, a major road that includes branch offices of state security agencies.
In the neighborhood of Medan, where violence has raged in recent days, Free Syrian Army fighters "launched their biggest attack yet all over Damascus, in 17 points" said Abo Abdo, a rebel fighter. They were working to "disperse the regime's forces all over the capital," he said.
A mortar fell on a house close to him, he said.
Video showed a tank firing in what appeared to be an empty Damascus road with a couple of abandoned cars.
A teenager, going by the name Firas, said that in the Bab Musalla area, people told him the neighborhood was being closed. He said he saw a group of people in the distance carrying rifles and knives. "I then saw them attacking everyone on the street," he said.
Syria, on state-run news agency SANA, said its armed forces "chased down terrorists who infiltrated" Medan, and "killed and arrested a large number of them. The military units also chased down terrorists who terrorized some families in the neighborhoods of al-Qaboun and Tishreen and forced them to leave their homes."
With the Syrian government restricting access to the country by foreign journalists, CNN cannot independently confirm reports of violence or details about the attack.
The building where the bombing took place is in Rawda Square, near al-Assad's home and the U.S. Embassy. Security officials and government spies have had a heavy presence in the area.
The U.S. Embassy suspended operations in February.
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The attack represents "a massive psychological blow to the regime" and will accelerate al-Assad's "demise," said Anthony Skinner, an analyst with the think tank Maplecroft, which provides risk assessments on global business.
It could suggest that, after a 16-month relentless uprising, "the regime itself is crumbling," said Rime Allaf, an analyst with Chatham House, a think tank focusing on international affairs.
Events in Syria show "a real escalation in fighting," said U.S. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta.
It "tells us that this is a situation that is rapidly spinning out of control, and for that reason it's extremely important that the international community, working with other countries that have concerns in that area, have to bring maximum pressure on Assad to do what's right, and to step down and to allow for that peaceful transition," Panetta said.
The U.S. government announced Wednesday a new round of sanctions against members of the Syrian government. A previous round this year included Rajiha.
"It's clear that the Assad regime is losing control of Syria," said Tommy Vietor, spokesman for the National Security Council.
He urged a political transition to help avert "a lengthy and bloody sectarian civil war."
"We continue to work closely with the Syrian opposition to ensure that a transition guarantees fundamental rights as well as those of minorities," he said. "... In the meantime, we continue to squeeze the regime financially. U.S. and international sanctions have had a significant effect on Assad's reserves, and are making it difficult for this regime to finance its brutality."
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Syrian Information Minister Omran al-Zubi, speaking on state TV, vowed that those behind the attack will be held accountable, even if they are outside the country.
The attackers targeted a committee that deals not only with security matters but all sorts of problems facing Syrians, he said.
He also insisted that those trying to divide the army are failing. "This army has not been divided," he said.
But increasing numbers of officials in the Syrian military have defected in recent days.
Two more brigadier generals fled to Turkey overnight, bringing the number of Syrian generals in Turkey to 20, a Turkish Foreign Ministry official said.
Rajiha, a member of the country's minority Christian community, was named by the United States Treasury in sanctions this year. U.S. citizens were prohibited from engaging in transactions with him and some other officials amid what the U.S. government called Syria's "continued use of violence against its people."
In 2006, the Treasury named Shawkat -- then Syria's director of military intelligence -- in an executive order, freezing his assets and prohibiting U.S. citizens from engaging in transactions with him. At the time, the U.S. government called Shawkat "a key architect of Syria's domination of Lebanon, as well as a fundamental contributor to Syria's long-standing policy to foment terrorism against Israel."
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Days ago, Nawaf al-Fares, the former Syrian ambassador to Iraq who became the country's highest diplomatic defector, told CNN that Shawkat had run an al Qaeda in Iraq training camp.
A U.S. official said al-Fares' claim was "broadly consistent with our understanding" of the Syrian regime's cooperation with al Qaeda "elements."
But the Syrian regime has repeatedly denied involvement in terrorist activities -- and in fact has blamed the violence of the past 16 months on "armed terrorist groups."
Al-Zubi, speaking Wednesday on state TV, noted that the attack that killed the four men coincided with a meeting of the U.N. Security Council.
The council could vote Wednesday on the fate of 300 U.N. monitors as a Friday deadline looms.
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The observers' work has been largely curtailed due to relentless violence that has surged in recent weeks and has moved into the capital, Damascus.
Western countries are pushing for a resolution that threatens sanctions against al-Assad's regime if government forces don't stop attacks. That draft also calls for renewing the U.N. observer mission for 45 days.
But throughout Syria's 16-month crisis, Russia has opposed any international effort that seeks to blame, punish or change the Syrian government. Russia -- along with China -- has vetoed two previous draft resolutions in the U.N. Security Council, leading to accusations that Russia is protecting the Syrian regime.
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Russia, meanwhile, has put forth its own draft, which "strongly urges all parties in Syria to cease immediately all armed violence in all its forms." The Russian draft also calls for renewing the U.N. observer mission for three months.
Kofi Annan, joint envoy to Syria for the United Nations and the Arab League, asked Wednesday that the vote on a draft resolution be postponed, the British mission to the United Nations said.
Annan earlier this year forward a peace plan that has failed to stop the violence.
He met Tuesday with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Moscow.
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Since the crisis began in March 2011, the United Nations estimates, more than 10,000 people have been killed in the violence; the opposition Local Coordination Committees of Syria estimates that more than 16,000 have died.
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