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A man who said he was from the Real IRA claimed responsibility for Saturday nights attack at the Massereene barracks northwest of
The soldiers, who were set to deploy to
The attack has raised fears that sectarian violence could return to
Figures from all parties vowed the shootings, which also wounded four, would not shake the political system put in place as part of the peace process.
Deputy First Minister Martin McGuinness of Sinn Fein, the main republican Catholic party and ex-political wing of the now-defunct Irish Republican Army (IRA) paramilitaries, said the days of conflict "can never come back again".
"I was a member of the IRA but that war is over now," he said. "The people responsible for last night’s incident are clearly signaling that they want to resume or restart that war. Well, I deny their right to do that."
First Minister Peter Robinson, of the Protestant Democratic Unionists, added that the killers had "no prospect of success in their campaign".
And British Prime Minister Gordon Brown vowed: "No murderer will be able to derail (the) peace process."
However, officials will be deeply concerned by the prospect that the Real IRA -- an IRA splinter group formed in 1997 to oppose Sinn Fein’s role in the peace process -- is behind the attack.
The group was responsible for
Suzanne Breen, a reporter with the Irish Sunday Tribune newspaper, said she received a telephone call Sunday evening from a man using an "authorized code word" who said he made "no apology" for attacking the soldiers.
"A man who said he was a representative of the South Antrim Brigade of the Real IRA claimed responsibility for the attack," Breen told BBC television.
Police are hunting three men involved in the attack -- two gunmen and a getaway driver. There are reportedly up to 300 dissident republicans active in
A senior security source told AFP the shooting was a professional one which marked a "step change" in the extremist threat.
The incident came 36 hours after
"This is a normal place which has a tiny number of people determined to drag us back to a place where no-one wants to be," said Orde, who said the security threat today was at its highest in the seven years he has been in charge.
Two other soldiers were also wounded as well as two pizza delivery men. Three are in hospital in serious condition and the fourth was listed as critical. One of the injured is thought to be a Polish national.
Detective Superintendent Derek Williamson, who is investigating the case, called it "an attempt at mass murder".
Violence in
In an editorial Monday, the Independent newspaper said the attack was designed to prompt a security crackdown in
But it added: "The likelihood is that the broader peace process will hold. The mainstream political parties of