We Bombed a School Full of Children. Call It What It Is.

Damaged building with "Iran's Girl School" text.
Screenshot from YouTube video uploaded by WION

148 girls died in Minab. The school had been separated from the nearby military base for a decade. International law exists for precisely this moment. So why is no one reaching for it?

Sara Shariatmadar was six years old. A second grader. Saturday morning she went to school, as six-year-olds in Iran, do, perhaps with a lunchbox, perhaps dragging her feet, perhaps chattering to a friend. Sara did not come home.

Her father stands outside the rubble of the Shajareh Tayyebeh girls’ elementary school in Minab, southern Iran, Minab is located north of the Strait of Hormuz and close to Bandar Abbas, about 25 km from the Gulf of Oman. Sara’s father does not move toward the building; nor can he move away. He knots his hands together. Separates them. Knots them again. Every time a paramedic emerges he raises his head, then returns to staring at the ground. He is still doing it when reporters find him.

What do you say to such a man? What language exists for this? There are no words for such grief.

One hundred and forty-eight children, a figure is confirmed by the local prosecutor and reported by CNN, were killed when Australia’s allies, US and Israel, bombed their school on the morning of 28 February 2026. Ninety-five more were wounded. One hundred and seventy girls had been inside when the first missiles hit. The victims ranged in age from seven to twelve. Teachers’ bodies were found on classroom benches. Backpacks lay in the rubble.

A second Israeli strike hit a school east of Tehran, killing at least two more students. Of course, it will all be explained away. Close to a military base. Or the fog of war, a favourite in the BRS legal defence.

CNN geolocated the Minab school and confirmed, through satellite imagery, that the building sits approximately 60 metres from an Iranian military base. The base is real. The proximity is real. But the satellite record also shows, clearly and unambiguously, with a decade’s worth of imagery to draw on, that the school and the base have been physically separated since at least 2016. The school was once part of the military compound. It has not been for ten years. That separation is visible from space. It was visible to every intelligence agency that planned this operation.

That distinction matters enormously under international law. We will return to it.

Let us be clear about what international humanitarian law; the body of law that civilised nations constructed after the Second World War specifically to prevent this kind of monstrous atrocity, actually says. The Geneva Conventions and their Additional Protocols are unambiguous: civilian objects, and in particular schools, are protected. An attack against a civilian object is a war crime. If there is doubt about an object’s status, the law presumes it is civilian. Proximity to a military installation does not strip a primary school of its protection; and proximity to a base from which a school has been separated for a decade, confirmed by satellite imagery available to any competent intelligence service, provides precisely no legal cover whatsoever. The principle of proportionality further prohibits attacks where the anticipated civilian harm is excessive relative to any military advantage gained.

One hundred and forty-eight dead children is not proportionate to anything.

The Rome Statute, which established the International Criminal Court, is equally plain. Intentionally directing attacks against civilians, or against civilian objects, constitutes a war crime under Article 8. So, too, does launching an attack in the knowledge that civilian casualties will be clearly excessive relative to the anticipated military advantage. The architects of the Nuremberg trials; Americans among them, lest we forget, established the foundational principle that orders from above do not excuse the commission of such acts. Superior orders are not a defence. They never were.

So who stands accused?

Donald Trump announced the strikes himself, in a video on social media, declaring “major combat operations in Iran.” He called it a campaign to eliminate “imminent threats.” Benjamin Netanyahu called it removing an “existential threat.” The attack was launched, we now know, while Iran had agreed never to stockpile enriched uranium and while active diplomatic negotiations were still in progress. Oman’s Foreign Minister Badr al-Busaidi, a mediator, issued a public statement saying he was “dismayed” that “active and serious negotiations have yet again been undermined.”

UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, Volker Türk, deplored the strikes publicly and immediately.

As for the school: CENTCOM spokesperson Tim Hawkins confirmed that his office was “aware of reports concerning civilian harm resulting from ongoing military operations” and was “looking into them.” The Israeli military said it was also “looking into reports of fatalities.” That was the full extent of the official response to 148 dead schoolgirls.

The silence where accountability should be is its own statement.

This is not the fog of war. This was broad daylight. A building full of children, not soldiers, not weapons caches, not centrifuges. Children. The staff member who survived told reporters she used to watch the girls playing in the yard every day.

After Saturday, she saw their bodies in the corners of classrooms.

We have been here before, of course. The grinding logic of impunity has become the signature condition of twenty-first century warfare. Israel levelled Gaza with American bombs and American diplomatic cover, killing tens of thousands of civilians, and the International Criminal Court issued warrants that the United States promptly announced it would not honour.

Russia’s war on Ukrainian civilians proceeds with brazen indifference. The Geneva Academy warned just weeks ago that international humanitarian law is at a critical breaking point; that the past two years proved devastating to civilians with little evidence of willingness among warring parties to limit the barbarity inflicted on the most vulnerable.

Now a girls’ school in Minab.

The usual machinery of evasion is already grinding into gear. The proximity of a military base. The fog of targeting. The regrettable but inevitable costs of what is presented as not only a virtuous, just and heroic war – but a war Iran’s peoples called for to be rid of a dictator. Cue people in Canberra celebrating, their laughter and cheers a discordant reminder of the tin ear of the propagandist.

CNN’s satellite analysis has already punctured the proximity argument before it can gain traction. The school was separated from the base a decade ago. That is not fog. Not ambiguity. It is a fact, visible from space. And available to every intelligence service that spent months planning this operation. It is a fact that will be available to any future tribunal examining the evidence.

We will not hear, in the official statements, about Fatima al-Zahra Mohammad Ali, age nine, whose father lost his leg in the Iran-Iraq war and waited at the school gates until four in the afternoon, when his daughter’s body was finally pulled from the rubble.

We will not hear about Sara Shariatmadar’s father and his knotting hands. These are the facts that do not fit the briefing notes, the Truth Social posts, the press conferences about military necessity and strategic objectives and the long arc of justice bending toward peace.

History has a long memory, even when justice moves at a glacier’s pace. Radovan Karadžić spent years as a fugitive before The Hague caught up with him. Charles Taylor ran Liberia for years before ending his days in a prison cell in Britain. The architects of My Lai were eventually named, even if most escaped punishment. The arc bends slowly, agonisingly slowly, when you are the father of a six-year-old girl standing outside a bombed school in Minab, but it does bend.

Trump and Netanyahu should be indicted for war crimes. And as allies we are complicit. Hence, the pronoun “we” in the title. Don’t hold your breath expecting the federal government to censure the US and its ally and Middle East proxy. Albo needs to pick up the phone. Call Trump. Remonstrate. Tell the President of regime change that he deserves to be indicted for bombing a school full of children.

Indicted not as a rhetorical flourish. Not as political point-scoring. As a precise legal proposition, grounded in the conventions their own nations helped write and ratify; the same rules which, for decades, the US has loudly proclaimed to the world as the foundation of civilised conduct in conflict.

The law exists. The evidence exists. The satellite imagery exists. The bodies exist, under the rubble of a school that had been a school, only a school, nothing but a school, for ten years.

It’s now a crime site. What we are waiting for? What we are always waiting for is the political will of a world that keeps building legal fences to prevent atrocities and then stands aside, shuffles its papers, and looks at the ceiling while atrocities are committed.

Sara Shariatmadar’s father is still standing outside the wreckage. His hands are still knotting together.

We owe him, at the very least, the honesty to call this what it is.

This article was originally published on URBAN WRONSKI WRITES


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About David Tyler 157 Articles
David Tyler – (AKA Urban Wronski) was born in England, raised in New Zealand and an Australian resident since 1979. Urban Wronski grew up conflicted about his own national identity and continues to be deeply mistrustful of all nationalism, chauvinism, flags, politicians and everything else which divides and obscures our common humanity. He has always been enchanted by nature and by the extraordinary brilliance of ordinary men and women and the genius, the power and the poetry that is their vernacular. Wronski is now a full-time freelance writer who lives with his partner and editor Shay and their chooks, near the Grampians in rural Victoria and he counts himself the luckiest man alive. A former teacher of all ages and stages, from Tertiary to Primary, for nearly forty years, he enjoyed contesting the corporatisation of schooling to follow his own natural instinct for undifferentiated affection, approval and compassion for the young.

15 Comments

  1. Donnie and Netanyahu will shrug their shoulders, say nothing and move on to other atrocities…er, military actions. If I remember correctly didn’t the Yanks and Netanyahu and gang make themselves from from war crimes some time ago?

  2. Those shitdrenched skulls that rise like foamy pox to political heights, on the efforts of perverted wealthy greedite ultraegomaniacal shittery have poxed all social, political life, for the dirtiest SELFISHNESS. The masses of honest, deserving, needy, ordinary folk everywhere are buggered and threatened by utter ignorant egofixated exploitative FILTH. The deepest rotten filth is religious superstition, a curse of ignorance. Civilised success and some decent balance gets ruined, and even after Josef and Adolf and a cloud of other poxes, we LOSE, Trumpery? SPEW!! Netanyashu? Murdering swine and tumorous turd. Superstition kills.

  3. Interesting that the NY Times, ABC, Guardian and BBC are reporting this massacre of school children but not FOX and SKY, to them it didn’t happen or if it did was not the sort of news the White House would publish .

    We need to take great care where we take our newsfeed.

  4. “Albo” will do nothing except parrot the US/Israeli script like a good l’i’l lickspittle doggy. I’ll never vote Labor again.

  5. NO-GO ALBO, the ZIONAZI puppet dancing to the tune of the foreign owned multinational corporations and their own political puppets.

    Max Gross states my feelings ….. Terry Mills notes the MSM censorship ….. Phil Pryor accurately describes the players …..and GL accurately predicts the primary outcome.

    We are living in dangerous times …..

  6. Great article David as usual.
    Murderous lying monsters ………….. including Albanese, especially as this grub gives us motherhood statements about how bad Iran is and the world needs to fix their problems and “my mother told me …..” bullshit about what is right and wrong. Total lickspittle to Trump, Murdoch and the Liberal party.
    This f%^&wit goes to his Christian church and with his Judeo Christian values is complicit in Genocide – definitely of the poor Palestinians and now the Iranians. Lets call it what it is. And what for. So that the biggest terrorist on the planet, Which we Australians are are part of, Can take over another country for the $’s.
    Not one peep from any of “our” politicians – Absolute disgusting gutless bastards that don’t give a f%^& about anyone other than themselves.

  7. Oh well, the PPOTUS (Pederast Protector of the United States) has done his TACO move by abandoning the Iranian people to their best efforts at replacing a genocidal theocratic regime very similar to the Christian ZIONAZI regime dictating US policy in Iran and around the world.

    Meanwhile the US military industrial complex count their increasing future profits from re-supplying the US military, and hence the amoral Isrevil ”Defence” Force with more expendable weaponry for their next attack, where??

    Well, we are told the objective of Greater Isrevil is clear jurisdiction over all the lands between the Red Sea and the Euphrates River, including all the natural resources there. So the present principally Muslim countries of Lebanon, Syria and parts of Saudi Arabia would be subsumed.

    Then a recent article elsewhere suggested that the ZIONAZIS have had three (3) ”Jerusalems” over their history;
    1) the dubious alleged historical ”claim” to Palestine,
    2) America, and
    3) since 1945 Australia, because it is at the other end of the world and so free from persecution that pursued the followers of Judaism for centuries across Europe.

    Australian readers should acknowledge the presence of about 2,500 US Occupation Marines on rotation through Darwin, and long range bombers at Tindal NT ….. all within 2,000 km of every Australian mainland city.

  8. For the record:

    “The death toll from an Israeli strike that hit an elementary girls’ school in Minab, a city in the Hormozgan province of southern Iran, has risen to 165 people, Iranian state media reported.”

  9. The latest polls have Albanese at his lowest popularity with, I believe a negative rating of 55. MSM say it’s because of the economy and other issues. I contend it’s because people are realising he’s a dud PM, timid and with a tin ear that leads him to make stupid decisions. The Grace Tame incident, announcing support for removal of Andrew from the line of succession, support for the grossly ilegal strikes against Iran, the Herzog invitation, caving in to the Zionists over an RC, the appointment of Segal not to mention colluding with the Coalition to water down the ICAC, electoral funding and environmental legislation, the attack on FOI, the attacks on Freedom of speech and movement..the list of his duplicities is almost endless. It is time for him to go. Finally Simba it is not quite true that there has been not one peep from our politicians, Shoebridge of the Greens has been very vocal in calling out the illegality of this action.

  10. New England Cocky. I appreciate the deep dive into the strategic landscape. You’ve highlighted the exact ‘sharp edge’ of the current crisis.

    While much is made of AUKUS, you’re spot on that the bedrock of this—the US-Alliance—is essentially a ‘Clayton’s pact.’ As many forget, the ANZUS Treaty doesn’t actually mandate a military response; it only commits the US to consult with us if we are attacked. Yet, we often behave as if we are under a binding obligation to follow them into every ‘decapitation strike’ the Pentagon dreams up.

    The recent attacks on Iran are a perfect example of the risk. It’s increasingly clear that this conflict is being driven by the strategic anxieties of Israel and Saudi Arabia, with global oil security hanging in the balance. As you noted, the US presence in Darwin and Tindal puts a target on our back without providing a reciprocal guarantee of safety.

    To say nothing of the recently new, improved and expanded Pine Gap where US missiles are aimed and its enemies placed under constant surveillance amidst a range of other functions essential to the US military machine’s eyes and ears.

    What we need now is a bipartisan backbone. PM Albanese (or any future leader) should be clear with Washington: Australia will not be a silent partner in illegal attacks or resource-driven wars. Our sovereignty shouldn’t be the ‘spare tire’ for Middle Eastern geopolitics. Standing with the ‘brave people of Iran’ is one thing; being the logistical tail for a regional conflagration is quite another.

    Thanks for keeping the pressure on the real questions of Australian sovereignty.

  11. 148 primary school girls are an “imminent threat” to exactly whom, TACO Tits?

  12. The Guardian are to be commended for pursuing journalistic enquiry into this matter which the UN are likely to designate as a war crime. https://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2026/mar/03/minab-school-bombing-how-the-worst-mass-casualty-event-of-the-iran-war-unfolded-a-visual-guide

    The US have walked away from all accountability and Israeli officials are using the Gaza rhetoric which they have refined; “it was probably Iran”.

    As this attack took place within hours of the Israeli/US bombardment it is most unlikely that that the first response from Iran would be a misfire in Southern Iraq.

  13. Amid the ongoing conflict with Iran, President Donald Trump said on Monday that Iran’s military had been “wiped out” in the first two days of a joint operation – around the same time that the girls’ school in Minab was bombed, by the US and Israel.
    Called Operation Epic Fury. Trump described the operation as a “tremendous success” and said US forces are ready to continue the action if necessary.

    “They (Iran) have no Navy, Air Force, anti-aircraft equipment. It’s all been blown up. They have no radar, telecommunications, leadership. It’s all gone. We could call it a tremendous success right now as we leave here I could call it, or we could go further. And we’re going to go further. But the big risk on that war has been over for three days. We wiped them out the first in the first two days. When you think about it, it’s incredible.”, Trump remarked.

    Trump when questioned, denied any knowledge of a report from the Pentagon confirming the US was responsible for a missile strike on a primary school in Iran.
    An investigation found the US military was attempting to target an adjacent Islamic Revolutionary Guards base in the town of Minab.
    But using outdated information, the Tomahawk missile struck the school instead, killing 175 people, mostly children.

    As Trump would say, a tremendous success worthy of a Nobel Peace Prize
    or two !

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