Mar 8 • 21:03 UTC 🇱🇻 Latvia TVNET

Video disproves Trump's claim: the US likely attacked an Iranian girls' school

New video evidence suggests that a US Tomahawk missile was used in the attack on an Iranian Revolutionary Guard facility, contradicting claims about the involvement of an Iranian missile hitting a girls' school.

Recent video recordings have surfaced, indicating that a US Tomahawk missile was indeed utilized in the attack on an Iranian Revolutionary Guard institution on February 28. This facility was located close to a girls' school impacted by the explosion, which has since drawn significant attention on social media. The geolocated videos shared by Bellingcat show smoke rising from the vicinity of the girls' school, providing concrete evidence contrary to US President Trump's assertion that an Iranian missile was responsible for hitting the school.

According to reports from Iran, the attack resulted in the deaths of 175 individuals, including many children, amplifying the outrage surrounding the incident. Images that have emerged challenge the narrative promoted by the US, showcasing that it was indeed a US missile strike at the time of the attack. Governor Mohammads Radmeirs had previously indicated that the casualty figures from the attack on the "Shajareh Tayyebeh" girls' school are still on the rise, underlining the tragic consequences of the incident.

Iran's Foreign Ministry spokesman, Esmail Bagaei, condemned the attack as a blatant crime and called for the world to stand against this grievous injustice. The situation escalated further with the Prosecutor's Office announcing that the number of casualties at the Minab girls' school has increased to 85 on February 28, intensifying international scrutiny of the US military actions in the region and raising significant ethical questions about the targeting of civilian structures in warfare and the humanitarian implications therein.

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