US Precision Strike on Iranian Water Infrastructure Draws War Crime Accusations
As temperatures in Bemani, Iran, climbed past 100°F this week, two water storage reservoirs were destroyed in a precision strike, cutting off life-sustaining supplies for 20,000 residents. The attack has ignited international condemnation and claims that the U.S. military is deliberately targeting civilian infrastructure to pressure Tehran.
While U.S. Central Command maintains that recent operations near the Strait of Hormuz targeted air defense and radar sites, independent analysis suggests a different reality. Commercial satellite imagery and recovered fragments identified by researchers as parts of a GBU-39 bomb point to a U.S.-led operation against the water facilities in Sirik County. Abdolhamid Hamzehpour, the provincial water authority chief, confirmed the destruction of reservoirs holding 2,500 cubic meters of water, forcing authorities to deploy mobile tanks to manage the crisis.
Esmaeil Baqaei, spokesperson for the Iranian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, condemned the incident as a calculated violation of international humanitarian law rather than collateral damage. Academic experts have echoed these concerns, describing the strike as a coercive tactic intended to inflict hardship on the Iranian population amid stalled peace negotiations. With both nations exchanging fire across the region, the destruction of these remote, isolated structures serves as a grim escalation in a conflict where civilian infrastructure increasingly finds itself in the crosshairs.
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