Pete Hegseth mocks 'Iranians who think they're going to live' and the reality reflects exactly that: Indiscriminate death and destruction on the ground (Exclusive) – We Got This Covered
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Pete Hegseth threatens to kill Iranians
Screengrab via YouTube/CBS

Pete Hegseth mocks ‘Iranians who think they’re going to live’ and the reality reflects exactly that: Indiscriminate death and destruction on the ground (Exclusive)

The war on terror involves bombing elementary schools now.

Pete Hegseth, whose own mother once called him a deplorable monster in a leaked email, had a message for Iran on Friday, and he delivered it with the kind of bravado you expect to see at a sports bar rather than a Pentagon briefing.

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When asked by CBS News about reports that Russia is feeding Iran intelligence on U.S. military positions, the Secretary of War immediately got defensive (though for Hegseth, that grimace is something of a … these days) and said: “No one’s putting us in danger. We’re putting the other guys in danger. That’s our job.”

And then the kicker: “The only ones that need to be worried right now are Iranians who think they’re gonna live.”

The clip drew swift condemnation. Adam Schwarz (per RawStory) called it a “grotesquely indiscriminate threat against the entire Iranian population,” while journalist Laura Jedeed highlighted how Hegseth hadn’t said “terrorists” or “radicals” or even “the regime.” Yes, folks, they’re not even trying to hide it anymore.

Hegseth talked about Iranians. As in the 91 million people who happen to live in a country now on the receiving end of a sustained U.S. and Israeli air campaign. MSNBC host Chris Hayes noted on Bluesky that from a pure propaganda standpoint, it might have been useful to at least gesture at the distinction between the Iranian government and Iranian civilians.

But here’s the thing. That kind of distinction requires a degree of precision that the actual bombing hasn’t demonstrated either.

The numbers on the ground support Hegseth’s murderous rhetoric

When the U.S. and Israel launched joint strikes against Iran on February 28, targeting military sites, leadership compounds, and the headquarters of the country’s supreme leader Ayatollah Khamenei, a U.S. missile struck a girls’ school in Minab, killing more than 170 children.

Now, a week later, Al Jazeera’s live tracker is putting the Iranian death toll at a minimum of 1,300 people, and its correspondent in Tehran says the campaign is showing “no region, city, or area” exemption. Over 300 children and adolescents have been hospitalized, and more than 6,000 are wounded.

“We never target civilians” works in the U.S., but it’s not the reality on the streets of Tehran

Yesterday, I had the opportunity to chat with an old friend who is currently in Tehran. Getting word out of the Iranian capital requires a workaround, as access to internet is severely limited by the government. Some VPN proxies still manage to break through the blackout, but overall, less than 1% have access to a stable connection.

My contact described hearing the sound of fighter jets overhead before a bomb suddenly struck a street bordering a city square in Enghelab Street. The initial blast must have claimed several casualties due to the crammed nature of Tehran’s capital of 16 million, and when people crowded in to help and ambulances arrived on the scene, a second strike hit that exact spot, causing more carnage.

“My ears were ringing,” he told me. “If I’d been a little closer, it would’ve taken me too. The whole street was covered in dust and ash. You couldn’t see far enough to run.”

The Secretary of War has already come under fire for alleged double-tap strikes in the Caribbean, and if reports are to be believed, the U.S. military and Israel are now deploying the same tactics—a war crime according to the Geneva Conventions—in Iran.


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Author
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Jonathan Wright
Jonathan is a religious consumer of movies, TV shows, video games, and speculative fiction. And when he isn't doing that, he likes to write about them. He can get particularly worked up when talking about 'The Lord of the Rings' or 'A Song of Ice and Fire' or any work of high fantasy, come to think of it.