Center for American Progress

: Loss of Innocents: The U.S. Strike on an Iranian School and Implications for America at War
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Loss of Innocents: The U.S. Strike on an Iranian School and Implications for America at War

Please join CAP for an online discussion on this tragedy and its implications for the U.S. military and the future of warfare.

Part of a Series

In the first hours of the war in Iran, a U.S. airstrike hit an elementary school, killing 168 civilians, most of whom were children. This incident occurred as Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth vowed the war would be prosecuted with “no stupid rules of engagement,” after slashing civilian harm mitigation efforts at the Pentagon.

Please join the Center for American Progress as we host an online discussion on this tragedy and its implications for the U.S. military and the future of warfare.

Featured experts

Wes J. Bryant was the first-ever branch chief of civilian harm assessment at the Pentagon’s Civilian Protection Center of Excellence. He is a retired master sergeant and former special operations joint terminal attack controller (JTAC) in the elite special warfare branch of the U.S. Air Force, where he led strike cells combating ISIS and other terrorist entities across Iraq, Syria, and Afghanistan.

Sarah Yager is the Washington director at Human Rights Watch. Prior to that role, she was the first senior adviser on human rights in the Chairman’s Office at the Joint Staff of the U.S. Department of Defense. For nearly a decade, Yager was executive director of Center for Civilians in Conflict (CIVIC), leading efforts to advise warring parties on civilian protection and responsible use of force.

Moderating will be Allison McManus, who is managing director for the National Security and International Policy department at CAP. McManus’ career has been dedicated to bolstering democracy, human rights, and security in U.S. foreign policy, with a focus on the Middle East. Prior to joining American Progress, she was the managing director at the Freedom Initiative, where she advocated on behalf of political prisoners in the Middle East and North Africa.

Explore The Series

Motorists drive along an expressway as plumes of smoke rise after a strike in Tehran.

By striking Iran on February 28, President Donald Trump launched the United States into war without any meaningful justification, strategy, or exit plan. This war follows a pattern for Trump’s second administration, where it has sought to use military action as a first resort, trampling the Constitution and sowing instability in new theaters seemingly every few months. From the Caribbean to Venezuela to Iran, Trump seems only interested in furthering narrow interests at home and abroad, while the American people are left with rising costs, greater insecurity, and moral outrage at the loss of service members and civilians.

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