Thursday, July 09, 2026

‘An Abomination’: House Dem Revives Hegseth Impeachment Push After Iran School Massacre Revelation

“Children were murdered in the first days of Trump’s illegal, pointless war that has wreaked havoc across the world,” said Rep. Yassamin Ansari.


An aerial view of a graveyard as funerals are held for students and staff from a girls’ school killed in a likely US strike on March 3, 2026 in Minab, Iran.
(Photo: Handout/Getty Images)

Jake Johnson
Jul 08, 2026
COMMON DREAMS

The House Democrat who introduced articles of impeachment against Pentagon Secretary Pete Hegseth earlier this year revived her call for his removal on Wednesday following news that top US military commanders bypassed warnings about the reliability of their targeting information before authorizing the bombing of an Iranian school, killing more than 150 people—mostly young children.

“This is unconscionable,” Rep. Yassamin Ansari (D-Ariz.), one of two Iranian Americans in Congress, wrote on social media in response to CNN’s reporting on the US commanders’ catastrophic decision. “Children were murdered in the first days of [President Donald] Trump’s illegal, pointless war that has wreaked havoc across the world. It is an abomination. It is a war crime. And it is why I’ve introduced articles of impeachment against Pete Hegseth.”

Ansari urged her colleagues to support the Hegseth impeachment articles, which state that the Pentagon chief “has authorized, condoned, or failed to prevent the use of military force in a manner inconsistent with the law of armed conflict” and “demonstrated a willful disregard for the Constitution,” among other alleged violations.

Currently, just 16 House Democrats are listed as co-sponsors of Ansari’s impeachment articles against Hegseth, who dismantled the Pentagon’s civilian harm mitigation programs before the Trump administration attacked Iran in late February. According to ProPublica, “Hegseth made deep cuts to the Civilian Harm Mitigation and Response programs and slashed CHMR staff at military commands by more than 90%.”

“That included removing civilian harm specialists from target development strike teams and reducing the team of 10 at Central Command to only one full-time staffer,” the outlet added.

CNN reported on Tuesday that senior US military commanders ignored warnings that intelligence pertaining to possible targets in Iran “was severely out of date and approved some strikes”—including the bombing of Shajareh Tayyebeh Elementary School in Minab, an attack that human rights groups say should be investigated as a war crime.

Months later, the Pentagon has not publicly released the findings of its investigation into the strike, and Trump recently said he doesn’t believe the US was responsible for the Minab school attack, despite now-abundant evidence to the contrary. The attack is seen as one of the worst massacres of civilians in recent US military history.

Last week, The Associated Press reported that when news of the school bombing emerged on the first day of the US-Israeli assault on Iran, “the US military knew they had conducted strikes in the vicinity—though it took the military time to verify the Iranian claims that a school was struck and begin a formal investigation.”

“One former Pentagon official, similarly speaking on condition of anonymity, said the bombing came as a natural result of changes made by the Trump administration to reduce staff to mitigate civilian harm and Hegseth’s emphasis on lethality,” the outlet noted. “When Hegseth took charge, he slashed the size of an office called the Civilian Protection Center of Excellence, created at the direction of Congress in late 2022. That stopped the office’s work on updating ‘no-strike lists,’ which are lists of protected sites such as hospitals, schools, churches, and mosques, that the Pentagon keeps.”


US Strike on Iranian School Came After Commanders ‘Bypassed Warnings’ About Outdated Target Info

Sources told CNN that warnings were ignored due to “expediency.”



People are seen at the site of the February 28, 2026 bombing of the Shajareh Tayyebeh girls’ elementary school in Minab, Iran.
(Photo by Mehr News Agency/Wikimedia Commons)

Brad Reed
Jul 07, 2026
COMMON DREAMS

US military commanders “bypassed warnings” indicating that their database of strike targets inside Iran was badly out of date shortly before launching a deadly attack on an Iranian primary school in the city of Minab, according to a Tuesday report from CNN.

Three sources told CNN that senior military officials received messages informing them that the intelligence behind the target list had been gathered years ago and “needed to be re-vetted.”

Regardless, the proposed Iranian targets were added to a strike list shortly before the US launched an attack on the Shajareh Tayyebeh Elementary School, killing more than 150 schoolchildren along with over a dozen teachers.

Two of CNN’s sources said senior commanders ignored the warnings out of “expediency,” as they did not want to significantly delay providing target lists during the outset of the war, which Trump illegally launched in February without any authorization from the US Congress.

For months, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has repeatedly dodged questions about the strike on the school, insisting that he didn’t want to comment on an ongoing Pentagon investigation.

However, one of CNN’s sources said that US military officials “knew within days how the mistake happened,” as the school was targeted based on “obviously old info.”

CNN noted that old satellite images showed the school once belonged to the same compound as an Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps facility. However, as recently as 2016, images showed “that a fence had been erected to separate the school from the rest of the base, and that a separate entrance to the school had been built.”

Rutgers Law School Professor Adil Haque, noting that intelligence on many of the targets was more than a decade old, called the US decision to proceed with attacks “inexcusable.”

The US Department of Defense has still not released its investigation into the bombing, drawing criticism from Palestinian-American policy analyst Yousef Munayyer, who reacted to the CNN report by describing the US military as being “quick to bomb, slow to investigate.”

The slow pace of the investigation has also drawn criticism from Rep. Adam Smith (D-Wash.), the ranking member of the House Armed Services Committee.

During a May congressional hearing, Smith grilled Adm. Brad Cooper about why the US hasn’t taken responsibility for the school strike despite clear evidence that it was at fault.

“In the past, when we’ve had these type of mistakes, they’ve been quickly acknowledged,” Smith said, “even if a further investigation is necessary to figure out prevention methods.”

Smith also criticized Hegseth for showing a “callous disregard for any sort of rules of engagement or protecting of civilian life” during his tenure as defense secretary.

Last month, President Donald Trump brushed off responsibility for the strike on the school, stating that “mistakes are made” and “war is nasty.”



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