A senior Pentagon official confirmed that artificial intelligence systems selected the first 1,000 targets struck in Iran, marking the first time the U.S. military has publicly acknowledged AI-driven target selection at this scale.
Trump's threat to bomb Iran's desalination plants isn't a gray area — it's explicitly prohibited under the Geneva Conventions. The administration is treating a war crime as a pressure tactic, and the paper trail showing this was always the plan goes back nearly a decade.
UN Human Rights Chief Volker Türk demands U.S. investigation into a military strike that killed 168 people, mostly children, at an Iranian school, calling the attack 'viscerally horrifying.'
A Kabul airstrike that killed over 100 civilians forced a truce between Pakistan and Afghanistan's Taliban government. U.S. media barely covered the bombing — revealing how quickly Afghanistan vanished from American news after withdrawal.
A BBC visit to the aftermath of an Israeli strike that killed a Lebanese family reveals how military operations systematically blur the lines between civilians and combatants.
Senator Warner's call for investigating a deadly school strike while supporting the war that enables it reveals how even skeptical lawmakers legitimize permanent military action by focusing on tactics rather than strategy.
AI companies like Palantir and Anduril sell targeting systems used in Gaza and Iran, killing thousands of civilians. They're defense contractors hiding behind tech branding—and the regulatory failure is already lethal.