How Trump has addressed the deadly Iran school bombing

The attack that killed more than 170 people, mostly children, in an elementary school in southern Iran has prompted anger and calls for an investigation in the United States.

But President Donald Trump has been giving contradicting answers about the incident over the past week. In early instances, he blamed Iran for the bombing. More recently, he has claimed that he does not know the details of the strike.

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The New York Times reported on Wednesday that a preliminary Department of Defense investigation into the bombing found that the US military was behind the strike.

Asked whether he takes responsibility for the attack after the Times report, Trump once again said, “I don’t know about it.”

Days earlier, Trump had insisted that Iran bombed its own school in the southern city of Minab.

“Based on what I’ve seen, that was done by Iran,” Trump said on Saturday. “We think it was done by Iran – because they are very inaccurate, as you know, with their munitions. They have no accuracy whatsoever. It was done by Iran.”

Pete Hegseth, the US president’s defence secretary, was standing behind him at that time. He declined to endorse Trump’s assessment and instead reiterated that the Pentagon is investigating the incident.

The February 28 attack has become emblematic of the civilian toll of the US-Israeli war on Iran. The assault has killed at least 1,300 people, according to Iranian officials.

After new footage of the attack emerged, several media outlets and independent investigations concluded that the strike was carried out with a Tomahawk missile, a US weapon that neither Iran nor Israel owns.

Trump told reporters on Monday that Iran “also has some Tomahawks” — a claim that was widely dismissed by military experts.

“They wish they had more. But whether it’s Iran or somebody else, the fact that a Tomahawk — a Tomahawk is very generic. It’s sold to other countries,” he said.

While the US has sold Tomahawk missiles to some close allies, Iran has been under heavy sanctions by Washington and cannot purchase weapons from the US.

When pressed further about why members of his own administration have not echoed his accusation that Iran carried out the attack, Trump said earlier this week, “Because I just don’t know enough about it.”

The US president went on to stress that “numerous countries” have Tomahawk missiles before saying that he would accept the results of the investigation into the bombing.

“I will certainly. Whatever the report shows, I’m willing to live with,” Trump said.

The US military has confirmed that it used Tomahawk missiles in the opening strikes against Iran on February 28.

And a Pentagon map of the initial attacks on Iran last week showed strikes on Minab.

Republican Senator John Kennedy, a Trump ally, said on Tuesday that the US was behind the strike but stressed that the attack was not intentional.

“We’re investigating, but I’m not going to hide behind that. I think that it was a terrible, terrible mistake,” Kennedy told CNN. “The investigation may prove me wrong, I hope so. The kids are still dead.”

He added that he was “sorry it happened”.

Kennedy did not provide details about the source of his assessment.

On Wednesday, nearly all the Senate’s Democrats sent a letter to Hegseth demanding answers about the Minab attack.

They sought details about how civilian harm mitigation measures are being applied and the role of artificial intelligence in selecting targets.

“To be clear, the war against Iran is a war of choice without Congressional authorization. Nonetheless, as these military actions continue, the United States and Israel must abide by US and international law, including the law of armed conflict,” the letter read.

UN Security Council adopts Gulf countries’ draft resolution

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The UN Security Council has passed a resolution put forward by Gulf Cooperation Council members calling on Iran to halt its attacks on Gulf countries. The measure was adopted with 13 votes in favour and two abstentions, while no member states voted against it.

UN Security Council adopts Gulf countries’ draft resolution

NewsFeed

The UN Security Council has passed a resolution put forward by Gulf Cooperation Council members calling on Iran to halt its attacks on Gulf countries. The measure was adopted with 13 votes in favour and two abstentions, while no member states voted against it.

Ecuador prepares for attack on ‘criminal economy’ with Trump backing

The government of Ecuador has announced that, starting this weekend, it is prepared to launch a sweeping military offensive against criminal networks in the country, with the support of the United States.

In an interview on Wednesday with Ecuador’s Radio Centro, Interior Minister John Reimberg framed the upcoming assault as a shift in tactic for the administration of President Daniel Noboa.

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“Last year, we dedicated ourselves to catching all the heads of the [criminal] structures, which led them to fight among themselves for the same criminal economy,” Reimberg said.

“This year, we are going to attack the criminal economy.”

Illegal mining and drug trafficking operations would be among the targets of the latest sweep, the minister added. No further details were provided about the scope of the operations.

Ecuador imposes curfew

Reimberg’s statements follow the announcement of a curfew for four Ecuadorian provinces: El Oro and Guayas along the Pacific coast, plus the eastern central areas of Santo Domingo de los Tsachilas and Los Rios.

The curfew is expected to stretch for more than two weeks, from March 15 through March 30, requiring that residents stay indoors during designated hours.

Should travel be necessary during curfew hours, officials warned that residents must be prepared to show documentation to justify their trip.

In Wednesday’s remarks, Reimberg argued that such restrictions were necessary to avoid civilian casualties.

“We don’t want collateral damage from the attacks we’re going to carry out,” he told the radio show.

“We need the roads clear because there will be troop movements. We need to have the roads clear to be able to carry out the operations.”

Reimberg added that the operation is expected to be of “greater magnitude” than previous crime busts.

“What’s the difference? The force with which we’re going to act,” he said. “Basically and in summary, we are going to destroy.”

Tightening relations with Trump

The curfew was announced on March 2, as President Noboa addressed Ecuador’s national police force.

He told the law enforcement officers to be prepared for increased operations to combat criminal networks in the country: “The next phase of the fight against organised crime begins now.”

Within days of his speech, the US issued a statement confirming that it had launched joint military operations with Ecuador. So far, the US appears to be focused on offering support in the form of military logistics and intelligence.

But the coalition comes as US President Donald Trump pressures Latin American leaders to take more aggressive action against local criminal networks, several of which he labelled “foreign terrorist organisations”.

Trump and Noboa, in particular, have forged a tight bond, with Noboa appearing to echo the US leader’s hardline positions towards countries like Cuba and Colombia.

Noboa recently expelled Cuba’s diplomats from Ecuador, amid a US fuel blockade on the Caribbean island. And as Trump called for Colombia to crack down on its illicit narcotics trade, Noboa imposed tariffs on the country for the same reason.

Top US officials — including outgoing Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem and the head of the US military’s Southern Command, General Francis Donovan — have also visited Noboa in recent months to discuss regional security.

The Trump administration has said it would like the US to exert its “preeminence” throughout the Western Hemisphere.

It has also attacked Venezuela and dozens of vessels in the Caribbean Sea and eastern Pacific Ocean, on the grounds of combatting drug trafficking into the US. Those attacks, however, have been condemned by experts as illegal under international law.

A spike in crime

After coming to power in 2023 for an abbreviated term, Noboa was re-elected in 2025 on a platform based in large part on tackling the growth in Ecuador’s gang activity.

Once considered an area with relatively little violent crime, Ecuador experienced a surge following the COVID-19 pandemic.

Experts say the reasons are multipronged. Ecuador’s economy had been weakened by the pandemic, and youth unemployment was high.

Then, there’s the country’s geography. Ecuador sits between Colombia and Peru, the two largest cocaine producers in the world, and its position on the Pacific Coast made it an attractive port for illicit exports.

That, in turn, has resulted in criminal networks increasingly trying to assert control over Ecuadorian territory and trafficking routes.

Last year, in 2025, Ecuador once again saw a spike in its homicide rate, with an estimated 9,216 murders reported — an increase of more than 30 percent over the preceding year.

In an effort to bring down those numbers, Noboa has resorted to hardline tactics that critics compare to the “mano dura” or “iron-fisted” approach of countries like El Salvador.

Noboa himself has likened Ecuador’s conflict with drug gangs to a “war”. Last year, he unsuccessfully championed a voter referendum to allow foreign military bases on Ecuadorian soil, arguing that such measures are key to stopping drug trafficking.

Ecuador has banned foreign military bases since 2008, in part because of allegations of abuse. The referendum was ultimately defeated.

But the Trump administration had backed the ballot initiative and praised Noboa as a key ally in the US’s ongoing “war on drugs”.

Though no bases will be built, on Wednesday the Trump administration announced that it would be opening its first field office for the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) in Ecuador.

Displaced Lebanese families seek refuge in school shelter

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Displaced families from southern Lebanon have taken refuge in a school in Sidon after fleeing Israeli attacks. Lebanon’s government says more than 630 people have been killed and over 800,000 people displaced since early March.

Displaced Lebanese families seek refuge in school shelter

NewsFeed

Displaced families from southern Lebanon have taken refuge in a school in Sidon after fleeing Israeli attacks. Lebanon’s government says more than 630 people have been killed and over 800,000 people displaced since early March.