Pentagon elevates investigation into Iran school strike


FILE PHOTO: A still image from video shows what experts say to Reuters appears to be a U.S. Tomahawk missile hitting near the Shajareh Tayyebeh girls' school in Minab, Hormozgan province, Iran, February 28, 2026, amid the U.S.-Israeli conflict with Iran. MEHR NEWS/Handout via REUTERS THIS IMAGE HAS BEEN SUPPLIED BY A THIRD PARTY. MANDATORY CREDIT. NO RESALES. NO ARCHIVES. MUST NOT OBSCURE LOGO. VERIFICATION: - Reuters confirmed the location from the buildings, trees, utility poles, wall and road layout, which matched satellite imagery of the area. - Coordinates from where the video was taken: 27.105714752109524, 57.08551574115519. - The date when the video was filmed was confirmed from the verified aftermath visuals and satellite imagery taken on the morning of February 28, which showed intact buildings at the location of the strike. - Smoke visible in the video before the missile strike is coming from the direction of the school. - Two experts told Reuters that the missile seen in the video appears to be the U.S. Tomahawk missile - Joseph Dempsey, a military analyst with London's International Institute for Strategic Studies, said the missile seen in the video is highly likely to be a variant of the Tomahawk missile and that it doesn't appear to match any other known cruise missile in operation by the countries involved in the conflict. - Joost Oliemans, a Netherlands-based conflict analyst who specialises in military equipment, told Reuters that based on the available footage, there are no plausible alternative candidates and that Israel and Iran are not among the few countries that operate very similar missiles./File Photo

WASHINGTON, March 13 (Reuters) - The U.S. military ⁠said on Friday it has elevated the investigation into a devastating February 28 strike on an Iranian girls' school after media reports revealed the probe shows U.S. ⁠forces were likely responsible.

Iran has said thestrike on the Shajareh Tayyebeh School killed 168 children. If U.S. fault is confirmed, it would rank among the worst ‌incidents of civilian deaths in decades of U.S. military strikes in the Middle East.

Reuters first reported the investigation's initial findings on March 5.

Citing the seriousness of the matter, U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth declined to comment on the preliminary finding of the investigation, saying: "We're not going to let reporting lead us or force our hand into indicating what happened."

He said a higher-level investigation would be led by an unnamed U.S. general officer from outside of U.S. Central Command, ​which is overseeing operations against Iran. Such a move is typically taken by the U.S. military to ensure ⁠greater independence for investigators.

"The command investigation will take as long as necessary ⁠to address all the matters surrounding this incident," Hegseth told a press conference at the Pentagon.

Iran's new supreme leader blamed the country's enemies for the school strike in his first ⁠message ‌to the country on Thursday, without explicitly saying the U.S. was responsible.

PROBE CAN BE USED FOR DISCIPLINARY ACTION

Three U.S. officials told Reuters the command investigation Hegseth referred to is an administrative probe known as a 15-6, which can become the basis for disciplinary action if warranted. It usually includes sworn statements or interviews with those involved. The officials spoke on condition ⁠of anonymity to describe internal military processes.

The head of U.S. Central Command, Admiral Brad Cooper, ordered the ​15-6 probe last week after the initial review was completed. ‌The outside officer was appointed on Thursday, one official said.

The development underscores the serious concern about how to respond to possible U.S. responsibility for the tragedy and ⁠the need to comprehensively examine ​the incident.

"It signals a recognition that something went wrong and to try to understand what happened and why," said Annie Shiel, U.S. advocacy director with the Center for Civilians in Conflict.

TRUMP INITIALLY BLAMED IRAN

It remains unclear how U.S. forces could have struck the school. Preliminary findings suggest U.S. forces may have relied upon outdated targeting data that apparently did not distinguish between the school and the adjoining Iranian military base in Minab, ⁠a town in southern Iran.

Video and other evidence suggest the school was hit by a Tomahawk cruise ​missile, a powerful, precision-guided munition that few nations other than the U.S. possess.

The investigation comes despite public comments by President Donald Trump initially doubting the possibility of U.S. involvement that stoked concern among some defense officials about whether he would be willing to accept blame.

The president initially said, without offering evidence, that Iran may have attacked the school and suggested Tehran may have Tomahawk missiles, which ⁠military experts call extremely unlikely.

Still, Trump on Monday said publicly he would "certainly" accept the results of the U.S. investigation: "Whatever the report shows, I'm willing to live with that report."

A second U.S. official pointed to those remarks as evidence that Trump was moving toward accepting the preliminary investigation results. Further, the official said public discussion of the investigation had made it politically difficult for Trump to reject the findings once they are finalized.

The official noted that a 15-6 investigation reflected the seriousness of the Trump administration's approach to the investigation because it would comprehensively examine what went ​wrong and how to correct those issues.

SCHOOL'S ONLINE PRESENCE

A Reuters visual investigation published on Thursday showed the Iranian school had a years-long, ⁠public online presence, including dozens of photos of the children and their activities.

The Shajareh Tayyebeh School was one of 59 schools within the Persian Gulf Martyrs' Cultural Educational Institute, a network affiliated with ​the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, the military force that reports to Iran's supreme leader, according to archived copies of the ‌network’s website.

The school’s website includes photos of students gathered in the yard, which matched verified ​videos outside the building after the strike.

Satellite imagery from mid-2015 shows the building was walled off from the Iranian military base and appears to have operated as a school since at least 2018, when the painted murals are first visible on its outer walls.

(Reporting by Phil Stewart and Idrees Ali; Editing by Don Durfee, Rod Nickel)

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