The post shares a Iranian state media video depicting parallel narratives of a young girl readying for school in Minab, Iran, intercut with a U.S. soldier arming a missile strike on her school, ending in an explosion; it has garnered over 87,000 views and mixed replies condemning U.S. actions while others criticize Iran’s human rights record.
Released amid a March 8, 2026, bombing that killed 175 at Shajareh Tayyebeh girls’ school, footage geolocated by analysts points to a U.S. Tomahawk cruise missile, contradicting President Trump’s claim of Iranian self-inflicted damage in escalating U.S.-Iran hostilities.
ईरान ने अभी-अभी एक वीडियो जारी किया है जिसमें दो समानांतर कहानियां दिखाई गई हैं:
— ANIL (@AnilYadavmedia1) March 11, 2026
एक लड़की स्कूल जाने की तैयारी कर रही है,
और एक अमेरिकी सैनिक उस स्कूल पर बमबारी करने की तैयारी कर रहा है जिसमें वह पढ़ती है।
बेहद क्रूर। pic.twitter.com/RoAFy5PSeB
The video serves as propaganda to rally domestic support and international sympathy, highlighting civilian casualties in conflicts; similar tactics have been used historically, as seen in 2003 Iraq War footage where child victims evoked global outrage per a 2004 Pew Research study on war media impact.










