An Israeli army tank killed Reuters journalist Issam Abdallah and injured six other journalists in Lebanon while they were filming cross-border shelling on Oct. 13, a Reuters investigation has found.
There's not really any conclusion other than the IDF just committed a blatant war crime and any response less than the immediate arrest of those soldiers and their leadership will be seen as approval for war crimes from the government.
Not like that's stopped the Israeli government before now! The most they ever argue on the issue is that they should be allowed to get away with it because something something "Hamas and Hezbollah did it first!" something something "you owe us because Holocaust (don't ask how we treat the actual Holocaust survivor families that live here)" something something "any criticism is antisemitism!"
The other thing is it now really calls into question previous deaths of journalists in this invasion. Deaths Israel was able to shrug off as a dangerous job in a dangerous area. That's why Reuters went so hard on bringing the receipts. They wanted to leave nowhere for them to turn to this time.
Not really any other conclusion? What about the one where the tank that fired at them was too far away to see them clearly but acted without communicating with soldiers who were closer and aware that the journalists weren't a threat? Apparently that's less likely than deliberately causing a PR disaster somewhere where there wasn't even anything controversial going on for the journalists to record.
I think its not excusable even if it was mistake. You have to be very sure when you literally blow prople into red mist. Like 110% sure. Anything else is inexcusable.
They were on an open hill top with little to no cover, standing around, for an hour. If they were a threat they would have been dealt with in seconds, not a fucking hour.
Also the Israelis are using optics on their tanks that makes 1km look like it's just down the street. Hell I had those optics in the US Army 20 years ago.
Furthermore it wasn't just the tank. It was a base which means if for some godforsaken reason that tank hasn't had an optics update since 1970, then they could easily have called over someone with good optics. Hell we have cameras that can see several kilometers. The guy they got on the radio with likely sat in an air conditioned room looking at a TV screen.