Amid a sweltering heatwave that pushed temperatures above 100°F in Bemani, an Iranian village located just kilometers from the strategically critical Strait of Hormuz, two critical civilian water storage facilities were destroyed in a bombing this week, cutting off safe drinking water access to 20,000 local residents. Multiple independent open-source analyses and Iranian official reports now point to the attack being an intentional precision strike carried out by U.S. military forces, raising grave legal and ethical questions over whether the Trump administration deliberately targeted non-combatant infrastructure — a violation that would qualify as a war crime under binding international humanitarian law.
The incident unfolded in the early hours of Wednesday, when Hormozgan Province’s water authority confirmed two large water storage tanks with a combined capacity of 2,500 cubic meters had been completely destroyed in the strike. In a public statement posted to social media shortly after the attack, U.S. Central Command acknowledged that U.S. Air Force and Navy units had launched a series of strikes near the Strait of Hormuz, using precision-guided munitions to target what it described as Iranian air defense positions, ground control stations, and surveillance radar sites. The command made no mention of any damage to nearby water infrastructure in its initial announcement.
Esmaeil Baqaei, spokesperson for Iran’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, swiftly condemned the attack, releasing public video footage of the destruction that clearly shows light blue pipes and structural components consistent with civilian water infrastructure. “As part of its ongoing aggression against Iran, the U.S. military has deliberately targeted vital civilian water infrastructure in Sirik, Hormozgan,” Baqaei stated in his address. “These facilities supplied drinking water to more than 20,000 residents across 10 local villages. This is not collateral damage — it is a calculated war crime, a flagrant violation of human rights and international humanitarian law. The United States must be held fully accountable for this systematic brutal attack on infrastructure that sustains civilian life.”
An in-depth analysis published by *The New York Times* late Wednesday corroborated many of Iran’s claims. The outlet confirmed that commercial satellite imagery matches the location and description of the two damaged facilities provided by Abdolhamid Hamzehpour, chief executive of Hormozgan Province’s water authority, who first reported the missile strike on Wednesday. Local media footage from the site shows one facility’s roof fully collapsed, while a second has a clear, concentrated impact point at the center of its roof, consistent with a precision-guided strike.
Crucially, the *Times* analysis notes that both water facilities are located in a remote area with no military infrastructure within their immediate vicinity, further supporting the conclusion that the strike was deliberate. Open-source weapons researchers from the Open Source Munitions Portal later examined photos of bomb fragments recovered from the site and published by Iran’s semi-official Tasnim News Agency, confirming the fragments are components of a GBU-39 precision-guided bomb, a weapon exclusively used by the U.S. Air Force. The *Times* adds that the damage pattern observed at the site — a clean, concentrated punch through the facility roof with limited surrounding blast damage — aligns perfectly with the effects of a GBU-39 strike.
The strike comes at a period of extreme volatility in U.S.-Iran relations, just months after an April ceasefire agreement reached following former President Donald Trump’s public threats to “wipe out Iran’s civilization.” Trump has publicly complained in recent days that Tehran is moving too slowly to finalize a new negotiated deal, and the U.S. military expanded its offensive operations with additional strikes targeting an oil tanker in the Gulf of Oman and additional Iranian radar and air defense positions between Wednesday night and early Thursday.
Regional officials and independent security experts have condemned the strike in sharp terms. Phillips P. O’Brien, a professor of strategic studies at the University of St. Andrews, argues that the attack is a deliberate act of intimidation targeting civilian populations rather than military objectives. “Trump is so angry that Iran will not give him the deal he wants that he is telling the U.S. military to commit war crimes,” O’Brien explained. “Destroying a drinking water facility in the middle of a heatwave is not an attack on a legitimate military target. It is a mafia-style operation designed to inflict suffering on the Iranian people to force political concessions.”
Local officials have confirmed that temperatures in the region remain “unbearably high” for residents now cut off from their main drinking water supply, though emergency response teams have deployed mobile water tanks to the 10 affected villages to mitigate the immediate public health risk.









