Bombed Iranian girls school had vivid website and years-long online presence

Published 12 Mar, 2026 11:56pm 7 min read
Graves were prepared for the victims in Minab on March 2. Reuters
Graves were prepared for the victims in Minab on March 2. Reuters

An Iranian girls’ school that took a direct hit on the first day of the war had a years-long online presence, including dozens of photos of the children and their activities, before it was bombed along with at least six other buildings in an adjacent military compound, a Reuters investigation found.

The school’s online activity calls into question how the American military vets and reviews strike locations. Reuters first reported that investigators at the Defence Department believe U.S. forces were likely responsible for the bombing, and new indications emerged that the U.S. may have relied upon outdated targeting data.

Separated from the base by a wall painted with bright murals, the Shajareh Tayyebeh School was the northernmost building hit on February 28. The building was destroyed during the barrage, and 150 students were killed, according to Iran’s ambassador to the U.N. in Geneva, Ali Bahreini. Reuters has not independently confirmed the death toll, which the Iranian Red Crescent said reached 175.

 A photo of an assignment from the school’s website shows a maze that leads to the late Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei. Marked at the top: ‘Ali and Fatemeh want to go see their great leader. If you can, guide the sister and her little brother.’ School website/Wayback Machine
A photo of an assignment from the school’s website shows a maze that leads to the late Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei. Marked at the top: ‘Ali and Fatemeh want to go see their great leader. If you can, guide the sister and her little brother.’ School website/Wayback Machine

The coloured walls visible from satellite imagery as early as 2018 can be seen in a version of the school’s website archived in 2025, whose photos showed girls dressed in identical pink and white in class and at play. The school was also tagged in a local business listing, Reuters found. And multiple satellite images from the months leading up to the strike provide other indications that it was a school, including playground markings.

The cluster of buildings appeared to have been struck by a series of munitions, including at least one American Tomahawk cruise missile, according to an analysis of satellite imagery data, photos and video of the strikes and their aftermath.

Video of the moment of impact by the Tomahawk on the buildings nearby showed a plume of smoke rising in the background. Satellite images from after the attack showed signs of at least seven distinct explosions along a roughly 325-meter axis, including the destroyed school, a rooftop punctured by a gaping hole, and a flattened building.

U.S. President Donald Trump said on Monday that Iran might have Tomahawks, although he did not explain how, and no U.S. officials have offered evidence of that claim.

 A photo from the boys’ school website and a video from the aftermath of the strike show similar posters on the classroom wall. Boys school website/Telegram
A photo from the boys’ school website and a video from the aftermath of the strike show similar posters on the classroom wall. Boys school website/Telegram

The Pentagon said the strike is under investigation but declined to comment on the school’s online presence, the satellite imagery or on the decision to target the Minab compound.

Two sources, both speaking on condition of anonymity, told Reuters that outdated targeting data may have been to blame, which was first reported by the New York Times.

Mark Cancian, a retired U.S. Marine officer and defence expert with the Centre for Strategic and International Studies think tank, said the U.S. Central Command would have had a longstanding list of potential targets in case of conflict with Iran.

“The lesson learned here would be to review the target lists periodically and more closely,” he said.

The school and at least six buildings in the adjacent Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps compound were the only places struck within 5 kilometres between February 28 and March 2, Reuters found. This suggests they were specifically targeted, rather than struck as part of a broad bombing campaign on the southern city.

Located near the Strait of Hormuz and surrounded by farm fields, Minab is home to one of the IRGC’s largest missile bases, according to state media.

The Reuters analysis included changes detected between those dates by satellites, which, even over a large area, can measure shifts from upheavals such as destroyed buildings, fire, flooding or landslides.

 A satellite image, annotated by Reuters, shows the Shajareh Tayyebeh girls’ school in Minab and other structures damaged after being struck on the war’s first day. 2026 Planet Labs PBC/Handout via Reuters
A satellite image, annotated by Reuters, shows the Shajareh Tayyebeh girls’ school in Minab and other structures damaged after being struck on the war’s first day. 2026 Planet Labs PBC/Handout via Reuters

In the days after the strike, another place in Minab showed major disturbance in the analysis: the town cemetery. There, on March 2, the dead children were buried, creating row after row of 20 tidy rectangular holes in the earth.

THE SCHOOL

The Shajareh Tayyebeh School in Minab was one of 59 schools within the Persian Gulf Martyrs’ Cultural Educational Institute, a network affiliated with the IRGC, 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.

Some of the schools in that network, including the Shajareh Tayyebeh girls’ school and its equivalent boys’ school in Minab, listed their addresses as being in or adjacent to IRGC-controlled locations, according to the archived website.

 A November 26, 2015, satellite image, annotated by Reuters, shows the Shajareh Tayyebeh girls’ school in Minab, Hormozgan Province, Iran. Reuters
A November 26, 2015, satellite image, annotated by Reuters, shows the Shajareh Tayyebeh girls’ school in Minab, Hormozgan Province, Iran. Reuters

The address for the Minab girls’ school is specifically listed as “Resalat Blvd, Alley No. 9, behind Asef Brigade.” The girls’ school is also included in a local business listing website that shows a photo of the alley with a sign clearly marked “Girls School.”

The boys’ school seems to share the address and be located on the side of the building that did not collapse. A comparison of post-strike images with archived photos of boys studying appears to show debris scattered on desks where students had once studied.

According to the London-based news website IranWire, the Asef Brigade is a missile unit based in Minab, under the command of the IRGC Navy.

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

THE STRIKE

In the early days of the war, the United States released photos and videos showcasing its use of Tomahawks in Iran, including on the war’s first day, February 28, when the school was struck. In three photos and a video from that day that were taken by the U.S. Navy, a Tomahawk missile launches from the deck of the USS Spruance, a guided-missile destroyer. The missiles are U.S.-made and can be launched from surface ships or submarines.

On Sunday, the semi-official Mehr news agency published a video showing the moment one of the buildings within the IRGC compound was hit. According to local media, the attack happened around 10:45 a.m. local time.

Before impact, smoke from what appears to be a previous attack on the compound is already visible in the video. Reuters verified the visual as taken on February 28 from videos of the aftermath and satellite imagery of intact buildings taken on the morning of the strike.

A satellite image, annotated by Reuters, shows the Shajareh Tayyebeh girls’ school December 1, 2025, nearly three months before it was struck. Reuters
A satellite image, annotated by Reuters, shows the Shajareh Tayyebeh girls’ school December 1, 2025, nearly three months before it was struck. Reuters

Reuters shared the video of the attack with five munitions experts. Four of the experts said the missile was likely a Tomahawk; one thought it was a glide bomb.

Joost Oliemans, a Netherlands-based conflict analyst who specialises in military equipment, concluded the compound was hit by a U.S. Tomahawk, saying that while a few countries had similar missiles, neither Israel nor Iran were among them. Joseph Dempsey, a military analyst with London’s International Institute for Strategic Studies, also identified it as a type of Tomahawk, although he did not rule out the possibility of a previously unknown missile.

In a March 4 press conference at the Pentagon, the U.S. military shared a map of locations it had struck in Iran. The map did not list Minab by name, but one of the strikes was marked with a red diamond where the city is located.

On Monday, the state-controlled Tehran Times newspaper published photos of what it said were the “remnants of an American missile that struck an elementary school in Minab.”

At the request of Reuters, Hany Farid, a digital forensics and computer science professor at the University of California at Berkeley, analysed the images and found no evidence of manipulation or AI generation.

Two of those missile parts, laid out on a desk and photographed in front of the remains of the school, match recovered parts of other Tomahawk missiles shared by Houthi militants in 2025 and documented by the Open Source Munitions Portal NGO.

Reuters was unable to independently confirm if the missile fragments were found at the site of the school strike or whether the base connected to the school was still being used by the IRGC when the compound came under repeated strikes on February 28. But at the school, there was activity as recently as December 2025. Satellite imagery showed what appeared to be people gathered in the schoolyard on a cloudless day.

The school motto, as posted on its website: “Today I learn; tomorrow we build.”

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