Iran images appear to show land mines scattered by U.S. forces, a first in years

Internet erupts as photos suggest U.S. dropped land mines near Iranian homes, sparking fury and memes

TLDR: Photos from Iran appear to show U.S. land mines scattered near homes by a missile site, raising fears of long‑term danger for civilians. Commenters are split between calling it proof of American double standards and insisting it’s just harsh wartime payback, with dark humor and outrage colliding in every thread.

Online, the photos of U.S.-made land mines scattered near a residential area outside Shiraz lit the fuse faster than any weapon could. The article quietly explains that experts believe these are BLU‑91 anti‑tank mines, likely dropped by American forces near an Iranian missile site. The comments? Absolutely not quiet. One camp is raging that this looks like the U.S. sneaking back into land mine warfare after years of promising to move away from it, calling it “hypocrisy with shrapnel.” They point out the mines reportedly landed near homes, not just military targets, and ask how this squares with any talk of human rights.

Another camp fires back that Iran launched missiles first, so people shouldn’t be shocked the U.S. is hitting back hard. Those users argue this is what modern war looks like and accuse critics of “suddenly discovering morals only when America is involved.” The drama escalates as others jump in to warn about kids stumbling on these devices years from now, turning the thread into a global shouting match over what “self-defense” really means. Meanwhile, the meme crowd compares the U.S. to a player rage‑quitting the ‘no land mines’ agreement, posting dark jokes like “Terms of Service updated, no civilian consent required,” capturing the mix of anger, fear and grim humor running through the discussion.

Key Points

  • Images posted to social media and shared by Iranian state media show land mines in a residential area in southern Iran.
  • Experts identified the munitions as U.S.-made BLU-91/B anti-tank land mines.
  • The mines were photographed outside Shiraz, about three miles from a nearby Iranian ballistic missile site.
  • This appears to be the first documented instance in more than two decades of U.S. forces using such land mines.
  • The findings were reported by the Washington Post’s Visual Forensics team, based on analysis of the shared images.

Hottest takes

"So we’re the ‘good guys’… with land mines in people’s backyards now?" — @CollateralEthics
"Iran fires missiles, America fires a Geneva Convention speedrun, got it" — @RulesForThee
"Nothing says ‘we care about civilians’ like planting surprises that can kill kids 10 years from now" — @FutureGhosts
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