The Washington Post â Nearly 1,500 Iranian civilians killed in U.S., Israeli strikes, report says
Nearly 1,500 Iranian civilians have been killed in dozens of U.S. and Israeli strikes that have hit schools, hospitals and other nonmilitary infrastructure since the Iran war began last month, a consortium of human rights groups alleged in a report issued Friday.
Researchers recorded 1,443 civilian fatalities â at least 217 of them children â from the start of hostilities on Feb. 28 through Monday, according to the report, which described the figures as âverified minimumsâ expected to rise as assessments â and airstrikes â continue. The findings, which appear to be the most comprehensive estimates yet of the warâs growing civilian toll, do not specify whether U.S. or Israeli forces are suspected to have conducted each of the individual strikes cited.
The report is certain to anger opponents of President Donald Trumpâs decision to start the conflict alongside Israel and heighten scrutiny of the administrationâs actions to de-emphasize the protection of civilians in military campaigns. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has publicly denounced what he says are the overly restrictive rules of engagement that guided recent U.S. wars, and the Pentagon under his leadership sought to dismantle a congressionally mandated office focused on mitigating civilian harm.
Critics have accused Israel, too, of disregarding international laws intended to safeguard civilians in war zones, notably in Gaza and Lebanon where tens of thousands have been reported killed amid its campaign to destroy adversaries supported by Iran.
âChildren are being killed at school. Men are dying at checkpoints as they try to move their families ⊠Women are being killed while waiting in line for bread. Medics are being killed while responding to emergencies,â Skylar Thompson, deputy director of Human Rights Activists in Iran (HRA), which co-authored the report, told The Washington Post. âThese patterns of harm raise serious legal concerns regarding the conduct of hostilities and demand accountability.â
The report concluded that major factors contributing to the loss of civilian life have included âtargeting errors and misidentificationâ linked to old or flawed intelligence, the use of explosives in dense urban areas and focused attacks on infrastructure that could serve both civilian and military needs, including transportation and energy systems.
Attacking civilian infrastructure is a violation of the laws of armed conflict, human rights experts have said. Trump in recent days has threatened to âobliterateâ Iranâs electrical plants in a bid to gain leverage over Tehran as he demands that the Strait of Hormuz be reopened. The waterwayâs closure has throttled global oil markets and caused gas prices to rise sharply, including in the United States.
The report states that public statements by U.S. officials show that the United States has not adhered to legal requirements to minimize civilian harm.
The report also cites what it says are the contradictory warnings to Iranian civilians issued by the U.S. and Israel. As hostilities began, Trump and the U.S. military instructed civilians to shelter at home. Israel urged people near military sites to evacuate. And both governments communicated many of their warnings via social media, a significant complication, the report notes, as most Iranians have had little to no internet access amid the conflict.
U.S. Central Command, which oversees military operations throughout the Middle East, declined to address questions about the reportâs findings. In a brief statement, Navy Capt. Tim Hawkins, Centcomâs spokesman, said that âU.S. forces do not target civilians, unlike the Iranian regime which has indiscriminately targeted and attacked innocent people in neighboring countries more than 300 timesâ since the conflict began.
The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) issued a statement in response to the report that says the goal of its campaign is âto put an end to the existential threat posed by the Iranian regime to the State of Israel.â The IDF, it says, directs its strikes âexclusively against lawful military objectives in accordance with the Laws of Armed Conflict, including the principles of distinction, proportionality, and precautions during strikes.â
As The Post reported this month, flawed targeting probably played a role in a strike that hit a girlsâ school in southern Iran. The building is adjacent to an Iranian military facility but in the last several years was walled off from the base, a development that may have been missed by military analysts responsible for studying changes at potential strike locations, according to people familiar with the issue.
At least 168 children were killed â and 110 civilians were injured â in the strike, according to the report, which Thompson says combined publicly available data and witness accounts to verify the death toll.
The Pentagon ordered a formal investigation of the school strike after an initial review, officials said, a tacit acknowledgment that the attack was carried out by U.S. forces and that civilian harm allegations appear to be credible. To date, U.S. officials have not explicitly accepted responsibility for the attack. If the investigationâs findings do affirm that U.S. forces were at fault, the incident would represent the largest confirmed civilian death toll from any single U.S. attack since 1991.
The report found that at least 43 other Iranian schools had been damaged in attacks since the conflict began.
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