More than 120 Democratic representatives wrote to Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth on Thursday asking whether the Maven Smart System — the Pentagon's AI-assisted targeting platform — or other automated tools identified the Shajareh Tayyebeh girls' school in Minab as a military target. The letter follows a similar demand from 46 senators, including independents Sanders and King , escalating the inquiry from the upper chamber to the lower one.
The question has narrowed since the strike on 28 February. Early reporting focused on whether outdated intelligence caused the misidentification. A preliminary US military investigation found the intended target was a nearby naval facility, and targeting data did not reflect current ground conditions . Three independent analyses — by the Washington Post, CNN, and CBC — used crater geometry, fragment analysis, and geolocated debris to conclude the strike was targeted and deliberate, aimed at a misidentified location . Between 165 and 180 people died, mostly primary-school girls. The Washington Post subsequently reported that the target list may have processed this outdated data through automated systems — and the question shifted from whether bad intelligence existed to whether an algorithm acted on it without a human checking the output.
The distinction matters because of the campaign's scale. Operation Epic Fury has struck more than 5,000 targets since 28 February — roughly 385 per day. At that rate, the question is whether meaningful human review of each targeting decision is physically possible, or whether the campaign's tempo has created a structural dependence on automated target generation that compresses human judgement to a formality. Project Maven was designed to accelerate target identification from hours to minutes. The Minab strike forces a specific question: at what point does acceleration make review impossible?
The Pentagon has not responded to the Senate letter. The House letter's explicit naming of Maven gives the administration a binary: confirm or deny the system's role. Hegseth's own statement on 2 March that US forces operate under "no stupid rules of engagement" will be read against whatever answer — or silence — follows. The accountability question has moved from the pilot who released the weapon to the system that selected the target.
