Turkish officials say three attackers with suicide vests detonated their explosives at Istanbul’s Ataturk Airport, killing at least 41 people and wounding more than 200 others. Editor's note: This video contains graphic content. (TWP)

Turkish officials say three attackers with suicide vests detonated their explosives at Istanbul’s Ataturk Airport, killing at least 41 people and wounding more than 200 others. Editor's note: This video contains graphic content. (TWP)

A brazen assault by three suicide bombers on Istanbul’s Ataturk Airport has set the stage for a more violent conflict between Turkey and the Islamic State, a development that would deepen Turkish involvement in the Syrian civil war.

There has been no claim of responsibility for Tuesday’s carnage, but Turkish officials blamed the Sunni extremists for the attack, which killed 41 people and injured at least 239.

The raid marked the fifth bombing attack in Istanbul this year and struck the country’s most important transportation hub. Although Kurdish militants also have recently attacked targets in Istanbul, analysts said the airport operation bore all the hallmarks of the Islamic State.

On Wednesday, a senior Turkish official gave a timeline of the attack: First, a militant detonated explosives in the arrivals area on the ground floor of the international terminal. A second attacker exploded a bomb minutes later in the departures area upstairs. Finally, a third bomber detonated explosives in the parking area amid the chaos as people fled to escape the attacks inside.

[A day after the Istanbul attack: ‘We’re sad. We’re scared.’]





It was unclear at what point security forces exchanged gunfire with the attackers, according to the official’s timeline. But witnesses spoke Wednesday of scenes of panic, fear and wounded fellow travelers.

“It was chaos. No one was in charge,” said Faisal Rashid, a 15-year-old who was traveling with his family from Sweden to Iraq, where they are originally from. “We just ran, all of us, outside. We didn’t know what we were doing – we just thought we could die.”

Even as the country reeled from the violence, the assault on one of the world’s busiest airports — and a symbol of Turkey’s modern economy — threatened to propel the country into a wider war with the Islamic State.

The airport handles more than 60 million passengers each year and is a hub for Turkey’s official carrier, Turkish Airlines.

“If the Islamic State is indeed behind this attack, this would be a declaration of war,” said Soner Cagaptay, director of the Turkish Research Program at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy. “This attack is different: the scope, impact and deaths of dozens in the heart of the country’s economic capital.

“It will have widespread ramifications,” he said, and Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who has depicted himself as a strong, conservative leader, “cannot afford to let this go.”

Turkey has taken steps to battle the Islamic State, which grew strong amid the bloody civil war in neighboring Syria. But critics have faulted Turkey for its reluctance to take the fight to the extremists.

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[In Turkey, suicide bombers are targeting tourists]

For years, Turkish security forces turned a blind eye to the militants who slipped across the border from Syria, where Islamist rebels and others have been battling forces loyal to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.

Turkey wanted the Syrian leader to step down and also saw the militants as a bulwark against Syria’s own autonomy-seeking Kurds. Turkey’s ethnic Kurdish minority has long sought greater independence from the Turkish state, and the rise of a Kurdish enclave in northern Syria worries nationalist Turks, who fear it will inspire the Kurds in Turkey.

Fighters gathering on the ­Turkish-Syrian border — many of whom eventually joined the ­Islamic State — used Turkey as a crucial route for weapons, recruits and supplies. Lax enforcement along the frontier allowed the militants to develop sprawling networks inside Turkey, even as they grabbed land across Syria and Iraq.

And when the detente between Turkey and the militants came to an end — when Turkey joined the U.S.-led coalition against the Islamic State and opened its Incirlik Air Base to U.S. aircraft — the networks were tapped for the new battle with the Turkish state.

The Islamic State has either claimed or been blamed for at least five major suicide attacks in Turkey in the past year, including the assault at the airport and two other bombings in Istanbul this year.

Now, the two sides are edging toward full-fledged conflict, analysts say.

“They went from a cold war to a limited war and are now moving towards full-scale war,” Cagaptay said of Turkey and the Islamic State.

But among the questions is whether Turkey, a NATO member and U.S. ally, could actually escalate its role in the campaign in Syria.

Turkey’s airstrikes against Islamic State positions were suspended after Moscow, responding to Turkey’s downing of a Russian jet that Ankara said was flying over its territory last October, threatened to shoot down Turkish planes over Syria. Since then, Turkey has flown only surveillance and reconnaissance missions in its own airspace.

Russia intervened in Syria last fall to prop up Assad in the face of the rebel onslaught.

This week, Erdogan met Russian President Vladimir Putin’s demand for an apology for the shoot-down. The two spoke by phone Wednesday, the presidency here said, and Putin expressed his condolences for the victims of the Istanbul airport attack.

If Turkey wanted to engage with the Islamic State anywhere in northern Syria, “they cannot do it without Russia’s blessing,” Cagaptay said.

But even as Turkey mulls its options in the fight against the Islamic State, the latest bloodshed “unfortunately suggests the beginning of the type of attacks that are coming,” he said.

“The capability of the Islamic State . . . is likely to continue to expand,” said Ege Seckin, an analyst at IHS Country Risk, a political risk analysis firm.

And the size and nature of the militant cells in Turkey means preventing their attacks will be difficult, he added.

Zeynep Karatas in Istanbul and Karen DeYoung in Washington contributed to this report.

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Today’s coverage from Post correspondents around the world