
Grieving Parents in Iran Spend Every Night at the Graves of Their Children, Killed by U.S. Strike
On February 28, a U.S. Tomahawk missile strike on Shajareh Tayyiba elementary school in Minab, Iran, killed at least 168 children, most of them girls aged seven to twelve. In the weeks that followed, grieving families have taken to the cemetery each night during Ramadan, setting up rugs, candles, and food to spend the night beside their children’s graves. Parents recite prayers, share memories, and observe suhoor in a collective vigil that lasts until dawn. An internal U.S. military investigation linked the attack to outdated targeting data, though the administration has not publicly acknowledged responsibility.

Israel Strikes Largest Iranian Gas Field, Central Beirut; What AIPAC Got for $22 Million in Illinois; U.S. Hits Iran Missiles...
Israel and the United States launched coordinated strikes this week, targeting Iran’s offshore South Pars gas field and missile sites near the Strait of Hormuz, while Israel assassinated Iran’s intelligence minister. The attacks pushed the death toll in Lebanon above 900...

As Israel Calls for an Uprising in Iran, Basij Militias Vow to Crush Opposition to the State
Israel’s air force announced a series of strikes in Tehran that killed Basij commander Gholamreza Soleimani and, in a separate raid, senior security official Ali Larijani. The attacks were framed by Israeli officials as a catalyst for an Iranian uprising, a...
