Two Waves Over Minab: What Bellingcat Found

by | Mar 30, 2026 | News | 0 comments

Related: Mines in the Street: America’s Secret Weapon Against Iran’s Missiles New video evidence analyzed by Bellingcat reveals that the February 28 strike on an IRGC compound in Minab — which also destroyed the adjacent Shajareh Tayyebeh girls’ school — did not happen in a single moment. It came in two distinct waves, separated by roughly an hour. The finding reshapes what we know about the deadliest single incident of Operation Epic Fury. At least 175 people were killed, including over 100 schoolchildren, according to Iranian authorities. The strike has become the most politically charged event of the conflict.
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What the New Videos Show

Bellingcat’s investigation, published March 27, centers on two previously unseen videos released by Iran’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs. According to Bellingcat, both were geolocated and verified by their Conflict and Human Rights Team — Carlos Gonzales, Jake Godin, and Trevor Ball. The first video, filmed from approximately 2.5 kilometers north of the IRGC base, shows roughly 10 Tomahawk cruise missiles impacting the compound over a span of about 50 seconds. The missiles are visible in flight — slender silhouettes descending at steep angles. Multiple detonations erupt across the facility in rapid succession. The second video, captured from roughly 2 kilometers southeast of the school, shows a separate wave of strikes hitting the IRGC clinic and at least two other buildings within the compound. By the time this footage was recorded, the school was already destroyed — visible as a flattened structure in the background.

An Hour Between Waves

According to an investigation by Bellingcat, solar shadow analysis of the two videos indicates the strikes occurred at different times on February 28. The first wave appears to have hit between 11:00 and 12:00 local time. The second wave came later — the precise gap is still being refined, but the shadow geometry points to a separation of at least one hour. This matters enormously. A single strike wave could be explained as a targeting error — an outdated map, a GPS coordinate off by a few dozen meters. But a second wave, launched after the first had already leveled the area, raises harder questions about battle damage assessment and re-strike protocols. The New York Times separately confirmed that fragments recovered from the school site matched Tomahawk missile components, with a contract number on one remnant traced to a specific U.S. procurement contract. The United States is the only party in the conflict that operates Tomahawk cruise missiles.

The Targeting Debate

A preliminary investigation reported by multiple outlets found that the school was hit due to outdated targeting data from the Defence Intelligence Agency. The IRGC compound and the school sit adjacent to each other in Minab — close enough that even a small error in coordinates or imagery interpretation could shift the impact zone from military to civilian structures. The incident has drawn comparisons to other coalition strikes where proximity between military and civilian infrastructure led to catastrophic outcomes. What makes Minab different is the scale — and the fact that it involved a girls’ elementary school during school hours. Iran’s government has used the strike extensively in its information campaign, releasing the Ministry of Foreign Affairs videos to international media. Investigations by The New York Times, CBC, NPR, BBC Verify, and the Washington Post have all concluded that the United States was likely responsible.

What Comes Next

Bellingcat’s two-wave finding adds a new layer to an already complex picture. It suggests the Minab attack was not a single imprecise salvo but part of a sustained, multi-phase strike package against the IRGC facility — one that failed to account for, or chose to accept, the presence of a school within the blast radius. The Pentagon has not publicly addressed the two-wave evidence. The story continues to unfold.

“Every war is a war against the child.”

— Eglantyne Jebb, founder of Save the Children
Sources: Bellingcat, The New York Times, Washington Post, BBC Verify, NPR

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