More than one hundred days have passed since the bombing of the elementary school in Minab in Iran killed 175 children. Trump and Hegseth initially denied bombing the school, but irrefutable evidence indicates otherwise.
A report was completed three months ago by the Pentagon but hasn't been released stroking fears it will be classified a military secret and the public may never see it.
But if it was an intelligence failure as suggested by mainstream media, the bombing of the school would still be horrific, but as trump told a reporter at the G7 “mistakes are made, war is nastyâ€.
President Trump on Wednesday said the strike on a girls' school in Iran during the opening hours of the U.S. assault in late February remains under investigation.
“It's such a strange question to be asked at this state. You're talking about a long time ago. Nobody did that on purpose,†he told reporters at a G7 press conference in France about the strike that killed about 150 people, mostly children.
“Mistakes are made, war is nasty. But I know it's under investigation,†he added, deferring further questions to Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth.
But what if it was done purposely? What if the double tap that killed more children and their parents was intentional as I suggested when it happened? Then that would be a heinous unforgivable war crime.
A Reuters stringer reported that the school was struck twice, forty minutes apart. The first missile hit early Saturday morning as school began on the first day of Trump's war on Iran. The second missile struck forty minutes later, giving parents enough time to arrive at the school to search for their children.
Why the timing matters.
Aljazeera reports that most of the parents are military members of the Asif missile brigade of the IRGC Navy, which is tasked with controlling the Strait of Hormuz.
If the pentagon report reveals that the purpose of the second strike was to kill the children's parents trump will undoubtedly continue keeping the report from the world's eyes, and that would be an admission of guilt to a war crime.
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