The US said all its personnel from the consulate in the city of Herat were safe and American forces later moved into the area to secure the site.
The attack underscored the perilous security situation in Afghanistan, where US-led troops are reducing their presence ahead of a full withdrawal next year.
According to Afghan officials, the attack in Herat started with the Taliban setting off two bombs, one in an SUV and the other in an explosives-laden small van, while militants on foot opened a firefight with Afghan security forces around the compound in the city, 1,000 kilometres from Kabul.
Taliban spokesman Qari Yousef Ahmadi took responsibility for the attack in a phone call with The Associated Press.
Around the same time, a suicide bomber detonated his truck full of explosives near government offices in eastern Paktika province after security personnel opened fire at him. At least seven Afghan forces were wounded in the explosion, another Afghan official said.
Afghan and US officials offered slightly different accounts of what happened in Herat, differences which could not immediately be reconciled as is common in the immediate aftermath of the attacks.
According to provincial officials, the attack began around 6 am with a powerful explosion caused by the suicide car bombers, some 60 metres from the front gate of the consulate compound. Fellow militants then engaged in a firefight with security forces in the area.
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