ThePhilippinesTime

Casualty Tracker: US-Israel war on Iran

2026-03-17 - 22:31

Between February 28 to mid-March, the regional escalation triggered by the joint US-Israel strikes in Iran has entered a sustained phase of hostilities. What began as a targeted air campaign has evolved into a widespread engagement involving 15 nations and territories across the Middle East. To date, over 2,400 deaths have been recorded and 4.1 million people have been driven from their homes. According to reports from Al Jazeera, the conflict has expanded into a massive regional exchange, with the US Central Command (CENTCOM) reporting strikes on over 5,000 targets in Iran and the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) retaliating against 27 military facilities across Israel and the Middle East. Iranian operations have now reached nine countries and a United Kingdom base in Cyprus, though the majority of these launches have been successfully intercepted. Impact on children On the morning of February 28, the Shajareh Tayyebeh girls’ school in Minab, Iran, was just starting the typical school day. Before noon, the classrooms were gone. A single missile strike killed 168 girls and 14 teachers. This marked one of the first of over 2,600 attacks between US-Israel on Iran and their retaliatory strikes, causing heavy casualties across the region. Since that morning, the regional conflict has claimed over 2,400 lives across the Middle East. In just over two weeks, the violence has displaced nearly 4 million people, triggering a humanitarian crisis. The human cost is most visible among the youngest victims. United Nations and UNICEF data show that over 1,100 children have been killed or injured in the region in less than two weeks. The geography of these losses is specific. In Iran, children account for roughly 14% of all fatalities which were driven by strikes on educational and residential infrastructures. Beyond the immediate casualties, the conflict has caused a total educational collapse; 52 million school-age children have seen their classrooms vanish as schools are repurposed into overcrowded shelters. Targeted and civilian casualties The tragedy has also reached those thousands of miles from their homes. In Israel, the conflict claimed its first Filipino casualty when Mary Anne de Vera, a caregiver from Pangasinan, was killed while reportedly assisting her ward during a strike. In the Strait of Hormuz, Filipino seafarer George Miranda is missing and presumed dead after his tugboat was attacked during a rescue mission, according to the Philippine Daily Inquirer. Even the centers of governance have been hollowed out from precision strikes in Arak and Tehran, claiming the lives of senior government officials and military commanders. The toll also extends into the very individuals who sustain regional life. The human casualty includes at least 30 health, emergency, and aid workers killed while on duty across Iran and Lebanon. They include 10 health workers at Tehran’s Naziabad base, first responders in Shiraz, and six Civil Defense volunteers in Lebanon who were lost while racing toward the sites of recent strikes. Displacement and humanitarian crisis While the statistics are vast, the reality of the war is found in specific coordinates where daily life was suddenly interrupted. In Shiraz, on March 5, a strike hit a playground in the Zibashahr quarter, killing 20 people. Days later, in Sitrah, Bahrain, a drone strike in a residential neighborhood injured 32 civilians, including a 2-month-old infant. These incidents anchor the data in documented locations where the loss of life is most undeniable. For those who survived the strikes, the challenge shifts to a search for safety. In Iran, 3.2 million people have fled Tehran and central provinces abandoning their homes to move away from strike zones. In Lebanon, one million people have been displaced and forced to leave after receiving mass evacuation orders on their mobile phones. With the conflict now involving several countries, the primary challenge remains in the sustainability of regional air defenses against a persistent cycle of strikes. Meanwhile, the targeting of energy infrastructure has triggered a global oil crisis, disrupting exports and threatening international economic stability. – Rappler.com

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