According to the Iranian Red Crescent, relentless attacks across Iran have caused catastrophic damage to civilian infrastructure, with more than 80,000 buildings — including hospitals, schools, and ambulances — either destroyed or severely damaged.

The scale of destruction is heartbreaking. Medical centers treating the wounded have been hit, schools that once sheltered displaced families now lie in ruins, and emergency vehicles have been rendered useless in the streets. The Iranian Red Crescent has described the situation as a “humanitarian disaster of historic proportions,” warning that essential services are collapsing in multiple provinces.
This grim report emerges as the US-Iran-Israel war continues its brutal and unrelenting course. While military targets remain the stated focus of operations, the sheer intensity and volume of strikes have taken a devastating toll on civilian life and critical infrastructure.

Mojtaba Khamenei’s office condemned the attacks as “systematic war crimes against the Iranian people,” vowing that Iran will continue to defend itself with full force.
Retired U.S. General Jack Keane acknowledged the high civilian cost, stating that “prolonged high-intensity conflict inevitably leads to tragic collateral damage that affects innocent lives and long-term stability.”
Global oil prices remain extremely volatile, trading above $34,000 per barrel, as the war’s human and economic toll continues to mount.
As the number of damaged civilian structures surpᴀsses 80,000 and the suffering of ordinary Iranian families deepens, the world must confront an uncomfortable truth: this war is no longer just a clash of armies — it is inflicting unbearable pain on millions of civilians. How many more hospitals, schools, and homes must be destroyed before all parties recognize that the human cost has become too high to justify continued fighting?
The international community is watching closely as the conflict risks crossing a point of irreversible humanitarian tragedy.
