US Hit the School in Iran Proved | Trump Lied | It was TOMAHAWK Missile Owned by America Only

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    ISLAMABAD : Monitoring Desk -Horrifying new footage proves Trump is LYING and it was the United States that fired the Tomahawk missiles that hit a girl’s elementary school in Iran, killing 160 kids and all of the teachers!

    Last night, Donald Trump spoke to the media and blamed Iran for the gruesome massacre of Iranian schoolchildren, claiming that one of their own munitions had fallen on the school.

    Now, new video footage reviewed by the Bellingcat war monitoring organization definitely proves that it was American Tomahawk missiles that hit the school – which Israel does not have.

    This means that Trump and Pete Hegseth are responsible for one of the worst war crimes in America’s long, brutal military history.

    “By the time we arrived, the entire school had collapsed on the children,” said one grieving mother to NBC News. “People were pulling out children’s arms and legs. People were pulling out severed heads.”

    Not only did we bomb the school, we did it TWICE – 40 minutes later. You don’t bomb something twice by accident. The second strike was clearly intended to kill the rescuers.

    This is an act of unspeakable evil and moral depravity. To slaughter children by the hundreds and then LIE ABOUT IT is a monstrous crime, and Trump and Pete Hegseth must be held accountable for this.

    “Donald Trump is credibly accused of raping children. Now he’s murdering them too, and America’s evangelicals will go to church and pray for him, she concluded.

    TEHRAN UNDER CONTINUED SEVERE BOMBARMENT | 555 Civilians including 171 Children Died | Hospitals Targeted | 5 Badly Damaged

    The Tomahawk Land Attack Missile (TLAM) is a long-range, all-weather, subsonic cruise missile used for deep-land attack warfare. Primarily operated by the U.S. Navy and the U.S. Army, it is designed to fly at extremely low altitudes to evade radar detection and can be launched from surface ships, submarines, and ground-based launchers.

    Manufacturer: Raytheon (RTX Corporation).

    Range: Approximately 1,000 miles (1,600 km), depending on the variant.

    Speed: High subsonic, roughly 550 mph (Mach 0.74).
    Warhead: Typically carries a 1,000-lb class conventional unitary warhead (WDU-36/B) or submunitions.

    Guidance: Uses a multi-layered system including GPS, Inertial Navigation (INS), Terrain Contour Matching (TERCOM), and Digital Scene Matching Area Correlation (DSMAC) for pinpoint accuracy.

    Current Status & Recent Use (March 2026)

    Operation Epic Fury: As of early March 2026, the U.S. has reportedly fired over 400 Tomahawks from Navy destroyers and submarines in just three days of strikes against targets in Iran.

    Minab Incident (March 2026): Investigative groups, including Bellingcat and BBC Verify, have analyzed footage suggesting a Tomahawk missile struck an IRGC base adjacent to an elementary school in Minab, Iran, resulting in high civilian casualties.

    Stockpile Concerns: The high expenditure rate has led to warnings of a potential shortage, as the U.S. has consumed roughly 10% of its current inventory (estimated at 4,000 missiles) in a single week.

    Production Surge: In February 2026, the U.S. Department of Defense reached an agreement with RTX to increase production to over 1,000 units per year.

    Major Variants

    Block IV (Tactical Tomahawk): Introduced in 2004, it adds the ability to loiter over a target area and be reprogrammed in-flight via satellite data link.

    Block V: The newest standard, featuring upgraded navigation and communication.

    Block Va (Maritime Strike): Specifically designed to hit moving targets at sea.

    Block Vb: Features the Joint Multiple Effects Warhead System (JMEWS) for better penetration of hardened land targets.

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