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Welcome to The Logoff: A US strike killed nearly 200 children on the first day of the Iran war, according to the preliminary findings of a US investigation into the deaths.
What’s going on? The findings are the product of an ongoing US military investigation into the strike, which hit a girls’ elementary school in Minab, Iran.
It’s the last data point in a growing body of evidence that the strike was the US’s fault, including verified video appearing to show a US-made and launched Tomahawk missile hitting near the school and photos of debris seemingly also from a Tomahawk missile. As recently as Monday, Trump had baselessly tried to suggest the strike could have come from Iran.
What do we know about the strike? At least 175 people, primarily children under the age of 12, were killed by the strike early Saturday. Because of Iran’s six-day workweek, which begins on Saturday, students were in school when it was hit. They were reportedly in the process of evacuating at the time, according to CNN.
How does something like this happen? The strike was likely the result of human error and out-of-date targeting data. The school was adjacent to Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps navy buildings and previously had been part of the same campus.
What’s the big picture? The Trump administration has taken steps that make these kinds of preventable tragedies more likely. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has frequently derided what he describes as “stupid rules of engagement” hindering “lethality.”
And as ProPublica reported on Tuesday, Hegseth’s DOD has dismantled its Civilian Harm Mitigation and Response (CHMR) plan, including the Civilian Protection Center of Excellence — aimed, as the name suggests, at preventing civilian deaths in war.
If it were still in place, experts told ProPublica, CHMR “could have made a difference.”
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And with that, it’s time to log off…
Hi, readers, here’s a hopeful story from the Washington Post: The tiny forests that could save endangered trees.
Bonsai, the Post reports, isn’t just a hobby and an art form; the long-lived trees can also serve as a sort of genetic library, preserving in miniature trees that are otherwise threatened in nature — with a long list of conservation benefits.
You can read Kate Morgan’s full Post story on bonsai here with a gift link. And if you’ve never been to the National Bonsai & Penjing Museum at DC’s National Arboretum, I can’t recommend it enough. Thanks for reading, have a great evening, and we’ll see you tomorrow!


















































