The denials come in response to reports in Hebrew-language
media alleging that an Iranian missile struck Soroka Medical Center in
Beersheba.
The false narrative is part of a psychological campaign
aimed at sanitizing Israel’s military image and concealing the extent of the
blow to its intelligence infrastructure.
As mentioned by Al Jazeera, Soroka Hospital has been used by
the Israeli military to treat soldiers wounded during operations in Gaza.
However, Iranian sources stress that the hospital itself was not the intended
target.
Soroka
Hospital is located between two major Israeli military sites, the IDF’s main
intelligence headquarters and a central command facility, both of which are
situated in the Gav-Yam Technology Park.
These installations reportedly serve as critical hubs for Israel's cyber
operations, digital command systems, and military intelligence infrastructure
(including IDF C4I and C4ISR systems).
Hospital
sustained shockwave damage from nearby blasts, it was not directly hit, Iranian
reports emphasize.
Israel has been accused of engaging in psychological warfare
by falsely linking the missile strike to civilian infrastructure, in order to
deflect attention from the damage inflicted on its military command network.
Contrary to this, Israeli strikes targeted two civilian
hospitals in Iran — one in Tehran and another in Kermanshah — an action that
has drawn little international condemnation.
Thursday morning’s missile barrage, claimed by Iran’s
Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), was a "precise and direct"
strike against military assets — not civilian targets.
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