On Feb. 28, the so-called U.S. and Israel launched an attack on Iran, bombing an elementary school in Minab, Hormozgan province. The bomb has been linked back to the Boulder-based aerospace company, Ball Aerospace & Technologies.
In a photo released by the Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting on March 9, fragments of the missile are displayed. Manufacturing information is imprinted on the parts, which indicates the parts were created in Boulder, Colorado, by Ball Aerospace. Ball Aerospace was acquired by BAE Systems in 2024, but the parts were created and bought in 2014.

Ball Aerospace specifically provided a satellite data link antenna, which is used to navigate Tomahawk missiles, the type used to bomb the school.
The U.S. attack on the Shajareh Tayyebeh Girls’ Elementary School killed 175 people, according to Iranian state media. The majority of those killed in the bombing were children. The U.S. bombed the school using a strategy called triple-tapping, meaning it was bombed three times in succession to kill as many people as possible.

BAE Systems has also been known to provide weapons to “Israel,” which are used to kill Palestinians in Gaza. These weapons include artillery systems that “Israel” has also used to launch white phosphorus at Palestinians.
BAE Systems, and formerly Ball Aerospace, holds deep financial connections to CU Boulder. Their relationship began in 1956 when the company was created in collaboration with physicists at CU Boulder. Today, BAE Systems provides the university with research funding and acts as a pipeline for graduate students to become employed following their education.
Initially, settler president Donald Trump blamed the bombing on Iran during a March 9 press conference, but Iran does not have Tomahawk missiles. The only countries with Tomahawk missiles are the so-called U.S., so-called Australia and Britain.


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