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🌡 Temperature Check
Day 13. The Pentagon has privately confirmed the US struck the girls’ school. 
Trump told reporters he ‘just doesn’t know enough about it’ — his own military 
does. A US military refueling plane crashed in Iraq. The war cost $11.3 billion 
in its first six days. Democrats just flipped a deep-red New Hampshire district 
by 16 points. Noise level: THE COVER STORY JUST COLLAPSED.
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📌 The Big Story
The Pentagon Admits It. Trump Still Doesn’t.
For 13 days, the question of who struck the Shajarah Tayyebeh girls’ elementary 
school in Minab, Iran — killing 168 children and 14 teachers — has been 
nominally ‘under investigation.’ That cover is now gone.
A preliminary Pentagon assessment has determined the US was at fault. The 
Intercept, NPR, and multiple outlets report that two US officials confirmed the 
findings: it was a targeting error. The US military used outdated intelligence 
data from the Defense Intelligence Agency, mistaking the school — which had 
been walled off from the adjacent IRGC naval base between 2013 and 2016 — for 
an active military target. A Tomahawk cruise missile struck it on Day 1 of the 
war. The US is the only party to this conflict that uses Tomahawks.
Trump’s response: ‘I just don’t know enough about it.’ He also suggested Iran 
may have obtained Tomahawks from other countries and used them on their own 
school — a claim contradicted by every military analyst, three current and 
former defense officials, and his own Pentagon chief, who declined to back him 
up. A US government official told The Intercept: ‘This is another instance of 
Trump lying and just talking out of his ass.’
What this means: If confirmed in the final investigation, this would rank among 
the deadliest targeting errors in US military history in terms of civilian 
child deaths in a single strike. 46 senators have signed a letter demanding 
answers. 120+ House members have asked what role AI targeting software played — 
specifically Palantir’s system, which reportedly relies partly on Anthropic’s 
Claude AI. This week, Anthropic sued the Trump administration after the 
Pentagon designated it a ‘supply chain risk’ following Anthropic’s refusal to 
allow Claude to be used for autonomous weapons or mass domestic surveillance.
The question that cuts through everything: Hegseth disbanded the Civilian 
Protection Center of Excellence before this war started. He fired the JAG 
lawyers. He announced ‘no stupid rules of engagement.’ The school was on the US 
target list. The targeting data was outdated. The civilian harm prevention 
infrastructure that might have caught this was deliberately removed. At what 
point does a ‘targeting error’ become a foreseeable consequence of deliberate 
policy choices?
📡 Under the Radar
Three Stories Being Buried Right Now
1. Democrats Just Flipped a Deep-Red District by 16 Points — and Trump Went to 
Campaign Against a Republican Who Voted for the War Powers Resolution
In New Hampshire Wednesday, Democrat Bobbi Boudman won a special state House 
election in a district Trump carried easily in 2024 — a 16-point swing toward 
Democrats. It’s the 28th seat Democrats have flipped since Trump won in 
November. Republicans haven’t flipped a single seat currently held by Democrats.
On the same day, Trump traveled to Kentucky to campaign against Republican 
Congressmember Thomas Massie — who co-sponsored the Epstein Files Transparency 
Act and voted for an Iran war powers resolution requiring congressional 
authorization for the war. Trump is actively punishing members of his own party 
for demanding oversight of a war that is now confirmed to have killed 168 
children in a school. That is the political story of this week and it is buried 
under war footage.
2. The War Cost $11.3 Billion in the First Six Days — Not Counting the Military 
Buildup
Pentagon officials told lawmakers Wednesday that the first six days of 
Operation Epic Fury cost more than $11.3 billion. That figure does not include 
the cost of the massive pre-war military buildup in the Middle East — the 
largest since the 2003 Iraq invasion. It does not include the economic cost of 
$100+ oil. It does not include the IEA’s 400-million-barrel emergency reserve 
release. It does not include what a global recession triggered by Hormuz 
closure would cost. The war is 13 days old. There is no publicly stated exit 
strategy. No one in the administration has been asked on camera to provide a 
cost estimate for the full campaign.
3. A Truck Rammed a Michigan Synagogue — and It’s Being Investigated as 
Domestic Terrorism
Wednesday morning in West Bloomfield, Michigan — just outside Detroit — a 
gunman rammed a vehicle into Temple Israel synagogue and opened fire. The 
perpetrator was killed. Multiple people were injured. The FBI is investigating 
it as a targeted act of violence against the Jewish community, potentially 
linked to the Iran war’s polarizing effect on domestic tensions. A separate 
shooting occurred at Old Dominion University in Virginia the same day, also 
being investigated as terrorism. Two domestic terrorism incidents on the same 
day, in the middle of a foreign war, while the president is on the road 
campaigning against members of his own party. This is the domestic threat 
environment right now and it is getting a fraction of its warranted coverage.
🔍 Who Benefits?
‘We’re Investigating’ — For 13 Days
The school strike happened on Day 1 — February 28. Today is Day 13. The 
Pentagon’s own preliminary assessment concluded the US was responsible. That 
assessment reportedly exists. It has not been publicly released. Trump is still 
publicly blaming Iran. Hegseth is still saying ‘we’re investigating.’ The White 
House spokesperson said ‘the United States does not target civilians’ — present 
tense, as a statement of policy, while the investigation into this specific 
strike confirms it did.
Thirteen days of ‘we’re investigating’ accomplished several things: it 
prevented the school strike from becoming the dominant frame of war coverage in 
its first week; it let the administration establish a narrative of Iranian 
responsibility that is now embedded in public perception; and it gave the war 
time to accumulate enough other events that this story now competes for 
attention with mines in the Strait, a new Supreme Leader, oil at $100+, and 
domestic terrorism.
Verdict: NARRATIVE DELAY AS DAMAGE CONTROL — the 13-day investigation window 
was not about finding facts. The facts were apparent from Day 3. It was about 
controlling when and how those facts became the story.
đŸ“ș The Noise
What’s Loud vs. What Matters
LIKELY DISTRACTION | Iran Warns Oil Could Hit $200 Per Barrel
Iran’s government warned Wednesday that global oil prices could top $200 per 
barrel if the war continues. This will drive 48 hours of financial panic 
coverage. The $200 figure is the ceiling of a worst-case scenario, not a 
forecast — and the IEA reserve release is specifically designed to prevent it. 
Watch the actual Brent crude price, not the Iranian warning. The warning is 
psychological warfare targeting global pressure on the US to stand down. It may 
work. That’s worth understanding — but the headline number is engineered to 
alarm, not inform.
WATCH ANYWAY | GOP Senators Warn Trump the Economy Could Cost Them the Midterms
The Hill reports Republican senators privately warned Trump this week that the 
economic fallout from the Iran war — $100+ oil, the jobs report, market 
declines — could spell disaster in November’s midterms. The New Hampshire 
special election result just put data behind that fear. This is the internal 
GOP pressure that doesn’t show up in press conferences. If that pressure builds 
into public Republican dissent on the war, that’s the signal that the political 
calculus is shifting. Watch who goes on record, not who stays quiet.
📚 Your Homework
Find the satellite imagery of the Shajarah Tayyebeh school in Minab, Iran — 
available through Bellingcat and NPR’s reporting — showing when the school was 
walled off from the adjacent IRGC naval base. The imagery shows this happened 
between 2013 and 2016.
Then find the US target list reportedly used on Day 1. Ask one question: if the 
school was walled off from the military base a decade ago, what year was the 
intelligence data that put it on the US target list? The NYT reports officers 
used ‘outdated data from the Defense Intelligence Agency.’ How outdated? That 
single answer tells you whether this was a tragic error or a systemic failure 
that will happen again.
⚖ The Verdict
The Pentagon knew. Trump still won’t say it.
A preliminary military assessment confirmed the US struck a girls’ school on 
Day 1, killing 168 children. The school had been a civilian facility for over a 
decade. The civilian harm prevention infrastructure that might have caught this 
was deliberately disbanded before the war. The lawyers who might have flagged 
it were fired. The rules of engagement were explicitly loosened. The targeting 
data was outdated.
The president publicly blamed Iran. His own military wouldn’t back him up. 
Three defense officials told reporters he was lying. The cover held for 13 days 
— long enough for the story to get buried under 12 more days of war news.
The school was on the target list. The school hadn’t been a military site in 
over a decade. Both things are true. Who decided to put it on the list, when, 
and with what data — and why hasn’t that person been named?
The Noise Report | noisereportdaily.substack.com | Not left. Not right. Just 
the questions nobody’s asking.
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