The Iranian Red Crescent confirmed 787 people killed across Iran since strikes began on 28 February — up from 555 twenty-four hours earlier. 232 additional deaths in a single day.
These are not battlefield casualties. No ground forces have entered Iran. No front line exists within its borders. The dead are spread across 131 cities in 24 of Iran's 31 provinces. Among the confirmed dead: 165 girls aged 7 to 12 at Shajareh Tayyebeh school in Minab, where investigations by the New York Times, CNN, and Time pointed to a US Tomahawk missile using outdated targeting data . No official attribution has been made. No independent forensic investigation has been conducted or permitted.
The geographic pattern cannot be reconciled with Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth's stated core objective of preventing Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon . Iran's enrichment programme is concentrated at four facilities — Natanz, Fordow, Isfahan, and Arak. US forces have struck more than 1,000 targets including naval vessels, communications infrastructure, IRGC command centres, the state broadcaster IRIB's Tehran headquarters, and the Assembly of Experts in Tehran , . Strikes across 24 provinces and 131 cities describe a campaign whose actual scope encompasses systematic degradation of Iran's military, institutional, and communications capacity — well beyond counter-proliferation.
Red Crescent figures are the sole available source. Iran's internet has operated at 1% of normal capacity for five consecutive days, preventing any independent verification. The actual death toll may be higher than 787; it cannot currently be lower than what the Red Crescent has physically counted. The 2003 Iraq invasion — the last air campaign of comparable scale — offers a precedent: early wartime casualty counts proved to be substantial undercounts once the Iraq Body Count project undertook systematic retrospective documentation, a process that took years. Iran's information environment on Day 4 is more restrictive than Iraq's was in 2003.
