An Iraqi woman, who refused to give her name, weeps after seeing the extent of damage caused by the blast at the al-Hamra compound in eastern Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, which is next door to her home.
Saudi civil defense officers are seen through the charred wreckage of a car at the site of the suicide bomb attack at the al-Hamra compound in eastern Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, May 14, 2003.
Danish flight engineer Michael Hoye, 35, holds a ball bearing which is believed to have been put in the bombs used in the blast at the al-Hamra compound in eastern Riyadh. Hoye had organized a barbecue for 17 people at the swimming pool near to the explosion site on the night of the attack.
Saudi Crown Prince Abdullah, second left, and other Saudi officials stand in front of a building damaged in a suicide attack, May 13, 2003.
Saudi civil defense personnel lower a body from a damaged building in the Al-Hamra compound, in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, May 13, 2003.
Secretary of State Colin Powell visits the site of one of three suicide car bomb attacks in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, May 13, 2003, in this image made from TV. Attackers shot their way into three housing compounds in the Saudi capital, setting off multiple suicide car bombs that killed at least 20 people. At right is Robert Jordan, U.S. Ambassador to Saudi Arabia.
President George W. Bush denounced the bombing in Saudi Arabia before outlining his economic plan during a speech in Indianapolis, May 13, 2003. He vowed that those responsible "will learn the meaning of American justice."
Saudi civil defense personnel search for bodies in the debris of the Al-Hamra compound following an explosion in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, May 13, 2002.
Graham Bull, 58, from Manchester, England, with blood on the sleeve of his gown, pauses at the Saudi German Hospital in Riyadh, May 13, 2003. Bull, a school teacher, was one of several people injured in the series of explosions.
Briton Erika Warrington, 15, laying in bed, and another injured patient identified only as Sinead, 26, are treated at the Saudi German Hospital in Riyadh, May 13, 2003. The two were injured in a car bomb explosion at a residential compound housing Westerners in Riyadh.
The scene following a car bomb explosion inside the al-Hamra compound near Riyadh, May 13. The explosion occurred hours before U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell arrived in the Saudi capital.
Police cars are parked near al-Hamra compound, in the suburb of Garnata, eastern Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, May 13, 2003.
Police cars are parked near al-Hamra compound, which suffered one of the worst attacks. Al-Hamra is Arabic for Alhambra.
Saudis gather at the scene of a car bomb attack on a residential compound housing westerners in Garnata, an eastern suburb of Riyadh, May 13, 2003.
Ambulances rush to the scene of a car bomb attack on a residential compound housing westerners in Garnata, May 13, 2003.
Smoke rises as an ambulance rushes to the scene of an explosion, May 13, 2003. Hundreds of anti-riot police and members of the elite National Guard evacuated the area, sealing it off as ambulances rushed in.