As it relates to the blame for this most unfortunate event, Gaza is pointing figure at Israel, and Israel is pointing fingers at Gaza - with both sides claiming certainty and future proof on their position. We do not yet know who to blame for this event.
Let us keep emotions level and wait for the facts, peddling blame and "they's" through unsubstantiated claims is dangerous and can be irreparable. Until the facts come out, it's best to stay neutral on this specific event.
The reality is of course that both are wrong. Both are using excessive force and are needlessly killing civilians. Neither have any business putting all the blame on the other side, regardless of who actually fired this rocket. The fact that it's entirely credible that either side could have done it, says enough about the nature of the warring sides.
Reality is also that only one side is laying a complete siege and endangering people it has duty to take care of as an occupation power under international law. And only one side is now continuing to kill and maim civilians on a mass scale, and destroying a city.
Hamas purposely stores weapons in apartment building and hospitals. Israel does its best to avoid civilian casualties - Hamas intentionally tries to kill as many innocent civilians as possible.
It’s Hamas that intentionally killed innocent babies and raped women - you already forgot?
Which is no justification for the IDF intentionally or "accidentally" killing innocent babies and women either - men also, of course, as not all males in Gaza support Hamas by a long shot .. you already forgot?
Not sure why you're bringing this up. Are you arguing for attacks on Russian civilians? Please don't. Although they share an occupation of a weaker country by a more powerful one that seeks to destroy them, everything else about the situation is entirely different. Let's try not to mix up those different tragedies.
That is not accurate. Israel is seeking to destroy Hamas, not Gaza. Hamas must be utterly destroyed. Unfortunately they hide among the civilians, cowards as they are.
I also agree that solution to this whole conflict is very simple, and that it's to totally destroy one's opponent. It's a very very good solution. There should be no negotiation and no diplomacy. I think Hamas is said to have the same goal, destroy Israel, but I don't know, maybe TV is lying to me.
And in any case, Isreal should be actually able to implement this. I trust it! It's a local superpower! So let's support a realistic solution and the side that can actually implement it, and end this loong conflict, because Hamas is clearly not the side that can practically do it. It will finally be the final solution so to say. (Because then there will be no conflict. So it's final, you know.) Palestinians will forget about it all, and there will be peace from then on, and ever after. There will be no national shame for them like in 1948, because this time, we're also doing it for them, because Hamas is also bad for them. They'll have to leave Gaza for a while, but that's ok. They'll be fine in the desert for a while. I've heard the good people from UN do take care of people in such unfortunate situations. It's not really our problem.
Note that Israel is also occupying the West Bank, and has quite thoroughly destroyed Palestine there. It's not just Hamas. If it was, they could leave the West Bank to Fatah.
you forget that Israel literally created Palestinian autonomy there. before that those areas were occupied by jordan (west bank, annexed in 1950) and by egypt (gaza. fenced off) till 1967 they didn't bother to try to create palestinian state .
Honestly, for how ubiquitous this claim is, I've never been able to find more than a handful of clips of urban warfare (?)
I don't think it's that much of a surprise that in the world's most densest urban area, militants will be in a city?
Either way, "human shields" isn't a valid defense. Especially if you don't provide evidence for __every single instance__ you're causing civilian damage.
Seeing this is apparently from NATO, I assumed there'd be more to say here. But the list of incidents they referenced are primarily "IDF Spokesperson".
> Israel does its best to avoid civilian casualties
If true, then Israel's "best" is not very good, because Israel has already made far more civilian casualties than Hamas over the past couple of days. And also over the past 2 decades.
No, I don't think Israel is doing its best. At best, they're paying lip service to the idea of avoiding civilian casualties, but it's pretty clear that to many people in Israel, including military and civilian leadership, the lives of Palestinian civilians aren't worth much.
It is true that Hamas tries to kill as many civilians as possible, and in that sense they are undoubtedly the more evil party (but evil does not justify more evil), but the reason Hamas does that, is to provoke exactly this kind of overly brutal retaliation from Israel. Because then more Palestinians will be confronted by their kids and neighbours being massacred by Israel, and they will be radicalised and willing to take up arms to avenge their family. And Israel obliges. In this sense, Israel is helping Hamas, enabling their recruitment, and keeping them alive.
If Israel really wants peace, an end to this violence, and avoiding civilian casualties, then they must be massive idiots, because they are instrumental in keeping the violence going, and Hamas is playing them like a fiddle. Note that the real leadership of Hamas is not in Gaza at all, but in Qatar.
> the lives of Palestinian civilians aren't worth much.
True, a decade long conflict takes its toll, messages that advocate genocide do also influence opinion. And still I think Israel puts more value on Palestinian life than the martyrs attacking it.
Also, Israels military tactics are quite "unbloody" compared to other conflicts, i.e. Syria, where there is deployment of sarin gas on civilians.
The Palestinian population is played like a fiddle. I don't think Hamas is too happy with the current results of their aggression.
> Also, Israels military tactics are quite "unbloody" compared to other conflicts, i.e. Syria, where there is deployment of sarin gas on civilians.
Is that your standard?
Before this new escalation, Israel had killed 14,212 Palestinians since 2000. I'd say that's pretty bloody. But we should be happy that they're not actively gassing all Palestinians...
> I don't think Hamas is too happy with the current results of their aggression.
They did bite the hand that feeds them and are now without power and supplies, a situation of their own making. This is exclusively on them with Israel being innocent.
Perhaps they should tune down trying to ethnically cleanse Jews, maybe a bit of success can come back into their lives.
"Palestine" launched over 10,000 rockets in the last 20 years and Israel defending itself is only right.
I think you're confusing Hamas with Palestinians. They're not the same thing. Palestinians are without power and supplies. Hamas got to bloody Israel's nose and has lots of newly radicalised Palestinians to recruit from. Equating the two betrays a deep misunderstanding of what's going on. Hamas leadership is apparently living in Qatar an not inconvenienced in the slightest by Israel's response; to the contrary, I suspect.
I don't think this is a misunderstanding. There is a lot of plain antisemitism coming to the surface in recent days and it is not restricted to Hamas. The reporting about the hospital attack a few days ago lead to synagogues over the world being under attack.
And no, this is not something that came into existence at the same time as Israel, the hatred predates that.
This is not enough to condemn Palestinians as a whole, but this is a war for survival and in any war there will be casualties. This is something the attacker has to take into account. And they know that fully well, it is part of their strategy.
Contrary to common wisdom that you should never negotiate with terrorists, Israel actually does that. That behavior has kept casualties to a minimum. Expecting more is unrealistic and very few countries would take the long road here.
To keep casualties to a minimum in any future conflict, there needs to be a push by Palestinians to condemn terrorist attacks or similar reactions will be a necessity.
What is there to explain? This statistic says something about the military capability.
What do you believe it says? I think by total numbers underline that the side with more military capability does show restraint. Most conflicts are way shorter with way more deaths.
Since 2000 there were over 10,000 rockets fired at Israel. It is not because of the lack of trying that casualties in Israel are that low.
It also shows that if the forceful response is meant to make the attacker learn, it's not working. Israel has made forceful responses for decades, and it didn't change a thing.
Do you mean the same white house whose president said that he saw pictures and evidence of beheaded babies and then retracted it quietly by an official? [1]
The lie that spread so much and propagated through the western news outlet. So I wouldn't have that trust if I were you.
The evidence does point out that it is more likely a Palestinian accident than an Israeli strike. Nothing is conclusive of course nor will it probably ever be, but that's what bbc, official Dutch government website nos.nl (https://nos.nl/collectie/13959/artikel/2494578-wat-explodeer...) and other sources I've read are saying. And the official White House statement.
"While we continue to collect information, our current assessment, based on analysis of overhead imagery, intercepts and open-source information, is that Israel is not responsible for the explosion at the hospital in Gaza yesterday,” Watson said in a statement on Wednesday."
https://edition.cnn.com/2023/10/18/politics/us-intel-gaza-ho...
So most likely Palestinian misfire, which won't be the first time btw.
Also the 500 death count is quite likely way more than the real number of casualties.
This does not have anything to do with my comment. I was replying to someone who is basing his claim on what the White House says. Which is proven that it spread misinformation and claims based on false evidence (or even lack of it at all) before, so it is not a trustworthy source in itself. Although that, Biden is saying that the other side is responsible for the hospital attack [1].
Were they targeting according to location or identity? How did they positively identify the target?
Don't the rest of us have imagery.
Laws of war state that civilians and medical personnel (the persons with the crosses on their helmets and uniforms who take oaths to do no harm) are not to be fired upon unless they are firing upon you.
When the laws of war apply, the chain of command is searched for the parties that can and should have sufficient evidence of their operations to prove their case.
Whether or not the laws of war applied, there is prosecution for war crimes (once we return to rational cost reduction and equal due process).
Yeah, video shot from north with rockets flying towards Netivot (eastward) or in some such general direction. Also not timestamp, so not much of use.
Al Jazeera Arabic video shows a point of view from al wafa medical towards Netivot (so eastward), and the failed rocket is flying initially northward, and was not fired from the sea at all, unlike the other video.
There's a video of a bomb exploding. Anyway, due to the crater being directly in the middle of the courtyard https://mapy.cz/s/kazakahoha and due to prior warnings from IDF, and shellings by IDF, and the information provided by IL not making much sense, I simply think, just like the doctors in the hospital itself, that this was intentional and done by IDF. Probably meant just as an even more "strongly worded" threat to evacuate, gone wrong. (when previous shelling didn't work) Kinda makes sense to target the bomb in the courtyard in such a scenario instead of at the hospital.
I mean accidents can happen, but anyone thinking that hospital that was repeatedly warned, including by shelling, and refused to evacuate regardless, would just be left alone and had an accident the next day with a bomb falling exactly in the middle of the courtyard, just stretches credulity.
No. But I see effects of several bombings in that area at the time. Why does it matter? IDF is clearly bombing Gaza. Are you saying IDF didn't kill a lot of innocents in Gaza?
Why does one event matter so much to you? I didn't even bring this event up, just expressed my opinion about it.
question is why are you bent on claiming that idf did it, after there were put a lot of evidence that show that it didn't and 500 dead and hundreds under rubble (together with rubble) disappeared ?
I explained why I think it's rather intentional bombing, than an accident. It makes sense to me. That's all. If IDF will not allow independent investigation as asked for by UN, that's where my thinking about this incident will end for me.
I'm more concerned with Israel's overall genocidal aggression in Gaza, rather than individual incidents.
Strange they decided to go back to this story after first saying they knew nothing about it and then saying that they had warned them to evacuate? Well the IDF have said it so it must be true, no need to look into it. Just quote it verbatim. I too am a well paid journalist.
you people still seriously having this discussion ? there are photos/videos now. a dozen of burned cars on parking lot. hospital is in one piece. all walls/roofs/etc are intact.
Im sorry I'm not frantically searching for all photos and videos right now, I'm just waiting for actual legitimate press / organizations to investigate.
Thanks for the context! Although you could have made that more clearer in your comment, and you are still leaving me to infer the details from your links. But anyways, I see your point now (weird that your comment was already downvoted).
yeah, i usual tend to leave to people to infer details. this way they can come to their own conclusions
and no, it's not weird. it's common on ycombinator.
in general i find it troubling that statement by hamas taken by everybody at face value, without ask for any proofs (besides 20 sec footage of something burning and 30 sec of doctors taking care of somebody somewhere there was absolutely nothing backing 500 dead and more under rubble). on the other side when idf publishes videos, photos, call intercepts, radar plotes, etc; it's "well, IDF has history of killing people and lying. we will reserve our judgement till we will see this confirmed by independent investigation".
I think conclusion followed by reasoning is more common on HN.
Both sides have a history of "the other side has a history of killing people and lying, we will reserve our judgement". BOTH sides have a history of killing people and lying about it. But then on both sides there are a lot of innocent people being killed regardless.
despite common belief, IDF tends to own mistakes and if there was some kind of breach of rules of engagement - off to jail you go.it doesn't mean that idf doesn't kill anybody. it means that things not white and black as they seen on tv.
there was entertaining thread on reddit a few days ago, where people were searching for "widely documented mass rapes by idf". the only documentation going back to statements from 1969 or so. after this everybody were split into 3 camps:
- very good in coverup (kinda impossible given amount of human rights organizations that document everything)
- idf dehumanizes palestinians so idf is repulsed from idea of rape
I get it, Israel is the better run country in this regard, and the Palestinians barely have a functioning government (and what government they have functions away from Gaza in the west bank), Hamas is basically a terrorist organization. But the Israeli hasn't been acting in very good faith lately, aside from the outlandish accusations leveraged against them, Netanyahu is a very nationalistic/right wing leader, who had to unilaterally reform the judiciary to make it less independent to avoid legal sanction.
Israel has been bombing Gaza nonstop for the past week. The damage is consistent with a bomb airbursting, not a rocket falling and exploding. No crater. Damage from other rocket attacks is no where near the level of damage in this attack.
just to make sure that we are aligned, what damage are we talking about ? small pothole on the parking lot, few burned cars and 5 clay tiles off the place on the roof ?
Answer what I asked. If you’re going to respond to my question with more questions that avoid answering what I asked, it makes it clear you have no intention of actually discussing this and are only here to post pro Israeli takes.
Blast looked smaller than a car, nowhere near the payload that was used on the hospital. Also range isn’t payload so not sure why it’s being mentioned.
> Airburst can happen wherever the fuse is designed to activate.
Maybe, but if you are using airburst it doesn't make much sense to activate it at ground level since it defeats the purpose.
And again, the pictures taking during the day light show very little damage - the surrounding buildings are fully intact, so a JDAM just isn't likely, airburst or not.
Seems more like a fuel tank that blew up causing more fire type damage than anything.
> will remain very skeptical that Gaza has rockets large enough to kill 500 people
In 2006, Hamas was fielding kit that could loft 17 kg of explosives [1]. Given the rocket is 66kg, that's a 25% payload fraction implying at least another 33kg of fuel at launch.
Solid fuel should deflagrate. But it looks like they historically used a sugar/KNO3 premix [2]. I think that could detonate when strapped to an explosive while encountering terrain. Add to that pressurized systems commonly found in a hospital, e.g. oxygen, and the deadliness of a collapsing building, and I can see their circa 2006 kit doing the job.
(Note: this is a back-of-the-envelope plausibility check only.)
> it could be the 500-1000lb bombs the IAF is dropping everywhere in Gaza
Sure. But those are precision munitions. I don't think there's an Occam's razor solution through this bit of the fog of war. (Yes, I know I'm deflecting from the horrors on the ground by thinking about the rocket mechanics. I'm going to try to observe my plane crash rule of ignoring attribution hypotheses for at least one week after.)
Speaking of fog of war, the IAF could easily release logs of sorties flown, ammo taken, ammo used, and where it was used. They could do that right now. They have not. Makes you think.
> the IAF could easily release logs of sorties flown, ammo taken, ammo used, and where it was used
It's an active war zone. There are good tactical reasons for not immediately disclosing this. (You also want to make damn sure that you didn't have a trigger-happy racist go off piste.) Conducting that audit credibly takes time.
Anyone arguing bombing a hospital at this time in this way furthered either side's strategic aims is missing context. This was a fuckup. To what degree, and at what level, is largely what's being lost or obscured.
Tactical? Hamas has no AF and limited to no AA. An audit would take time, but why then would you be posting misleading or false videos and making contradictory claims about the strike? For instance:
Edit: also check the footage the Israeli intelligence guy posted. Tell me that whistle you hear before impact truly sounds like a piece of falling debris.
Strategic? What exactly is the strategic goal of Israel? And how is that accomplished by starving Gaza and cutting off electricity and water? Or the wanton destruction of Gaza? The cruelty is the point and this was no fuckup.
One can't presume to know this. Not with soldiers' lives at stake. Also, there is real risk of regional conflagration. How an air force generates and sustains sorties is closely guarded, even in peacetime, for good reason.
First, you'd scrub the information. Second, you'd weigh whether it's absolutely exonerating. Absent both conditions, it doesn't make sense to release those data.
> What exactly is the strategic goal of Israel?
Removing the ability of a hostile neighbor to project power into their territory. Currently, the chosen route appears to be decapitation. Eliminating the government in Gaza so it cannot wage war.
To do that, Israel--a small country--has to maintain a web of regional and international support. Bombing a hospital might serve tactical aims à la total war. (There are zero cases of bombing a population into submission. The historical precedent is it strengthens resolve. Nevertheless, I mention it for completeness.)
Unless Israel can credibly show this was done by Hamas, it has already lost more than it could have ever hoped to have gained by bombing a hospital. Even if it were smack over an Islamic Jihad weapons depot or whatever.
> how is that accomplished by starving Gaza and cutting off electricity and water
It denies the enemy the capacity to organize and wage war. I'm not ignoring the humanitarian effects. Just noting that power plants have been legitimate military targets for ages, and water supplies since time immemorial.
also, it was 500 1min after it happen (very quick count), then it went down to 40 and then it went up again. don't forget those numbers are provided by hamas
Hospitals usually store large amounts of gas under high pressure, especially common is oxygen. And some of the rockets being produced inside the Gaza Strip have ranges of up to 160km (r160). That’s a lot of potential for an explosion… it’s heart breaking watching the news streaming from the region.
That's not typically what people mean when they use the word 'apparently' in that context. 'Apparent' and 'Apparently' aren't synonyms, which I guess can be confusing.
"You use apparently to indicate that the information you are giving is something that you have heard, but you are not certain that it is true." [1]
That's waaaay too long of a timeframe to predict anything in geopolitics, especially in a turbulent area. I wouldn't trust anyone claiming to know what this region will look like in a year, let alone 30+.
Good odds Sabireen/Islamic Jihad will eventually get a black market nuke and hide it in one of the tunnels making a big glassed crater if and when Israel ends up sweeping the area.
Iran likely obtains a nuke from North Korea. Detonating one in a religiously historic city is a no go. It could be put on a rocket, but expensive risk of getting shot down. If Israel's army gets concentrated for some reason preferably in rural area such as outside Gaza that would be a tactical vulnerability.
What are the odds we never get the true story? Half a dozen nations' spy infrastructure are trained on a strip smaller than New York City, to say nothing of our carrier strike group.
Nope. But I’ve seen footage of other airstrikes that sound just like the attack on the hospital. So unless you can provide proof that a broken up rocket sounds like that, I’ll go with it being a bomb.
127 comments
[ 4.3 ms ] story [ 235 ms ] threadFor one thing, it's against HN's rules, and for another, it only makes things worse.
https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html
>Israelis and Palestinians Blame Each Other for Blast at Gaza Hospital That Killed Hundreds
Let us keep emotions level and wait for the facts, peddling blame and "they's" through unsubstantiated claims is dangerous and can be irreparable. Until the facts come out, it's best to stay neutral on this specific event.
It’s Hamas that intentionally killed innocent babies and raped women - you already forgot?
And in any case, Isreal should be actually able to implement this. I trust it! It's a local superpower! So let's support a realistic solution and the side that can actually implement it, and end this loong conflict, because Hamas is clearly not the side that can practically do it. It will finally be the final solution so to say. (Because then there will be no conflict. So it's final, you know.) Palestinians will forget about it all, and there will be peace from then on, and ever after. There will be no national shame for them like in 1948, because this time, we're also doing it for them, because Hamas is also bad for them. They'll have to leave Gaza for a while, but that's ok. They'll be fine in the desert for a while. I've heard the good people from UN do take care of people in such unfortunate situations. It's not really our problem.
There has to be no nuance this time!
https://www.newstatesman.com/world/2014/07/jeremy-bowens-gaz...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_shield#2008%E2%80%932009...
https://engagedscholarship.csuohio.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?a... (This article is honestly, one of the most shiver-inducing ones)
Honestly, for how ubiquitous this claim is, I've never been able to find more than a handful of clips of urban warfare (?)
I don't think it's that much of a surprise that in the world's most densest urban area, militants will be in a city?
Either way, "human shields" isn't a valid defense. Especially if you don't provide evidence for __every single instance__ you're causing civilian damage.
Edit:
I decided to end up doing more research on this.
https://www.amnesty.org/en/documents/mde15/015/2009/en/
Apparently makes a claim that there was no evidence of human shields in the major war then.
Honestly - I feel like this is one of those situations where an entity has lied so much about a specific thing, that takes a life on its own.
It's how journalists don't fact check cops and just report their reports as fact. I'm guessing a similar thing has happened here.
I mean, we've seen how dangerous not supporting Israel has been in terms of reputational damage.
--
Edit 2:
Even more research. I did find https://stratcomcoe.org/publications/hybrid-threats-hamas-us...
Seeing this is apparently from NATO, I assumed there'd be more to say here. But the list of incidents they referenced are primarily "IDF Spokesperson".
If true, then Israel's "best" is not very good, because Israel has already made far more civilian casualties than Hamas over the past couple of days. And also over the past 2 decades.
No, I don't think Israel is doing its best. At best, they're paying lip service to the idea of avoiding civilian casualties, but it's pretty clear that to many people in Israel, including military and civilian leadership, the lives of Palestinian civilians aren't worth much.
It is true that Hamas tries to kill as many civilians as possible, and in that sense they are undoubtedly the more evil party (but evil does not justify more evil), but the reason Hamas does that, is to provoke exactly this kind of overly brutal retaliation from Israel. Because then more Palestinians will be confronted by their kids and neighbours being massacred by Israel, and they will be radicalised and willing to take up arms to avenge their family. And Israel obliges. In this sense, Israel is helping Hamas, enabling their recruitment, and keeping them alive.
If Israel really wants peace, an end to this violence, and avoiding civilian casualties, then they must be massive idiots, because they are instrumental in keeping the violence going, and Hamas is playing them like a fiddle. Note that the real leadership of Hamas is not in Gaza at all, but in Qatar.
True, a decade long conflict takes its toll, messages that advocate genocide do also influence opinion. And still I think Israel puts more value on Palestinian life than the martyrs attacking it.
Also, Israels military tactics are quite "unbloody" compared to other conflicts, i.e. Syria, where there is deployment of sarin gas on civilians.
The Palestinian population is played like a fiddle. I don't think Hamas is too happy with the current results of their aggression.
Is that your standard?
Before this new escalation, Israel had killed 14,212 Palestinians since 2000. I'd say that's pretty bloody. But we should be happy that they're not actively gassing all Palestinians...
> I don't think Hamas is too happy with the current results of their aggression.
Why not?
Perhaps they should tune down trying to ethnically cleanse Jews, maybe a bit of success can come back into their lives.
"Palestine" launched over 10,000 rockets in the last 20 years and Israel defending itself is only right.
And no, this is not something that came into existence at the same time as Israel, the hatred predates that.
This is not enough to condemn Palestinians as a whole, but this is a war for survival and in any war there will be casualties. This is something the attacker has to take into account. And they know that fully well, it is part of their strategy.
Contrary to common wisdom that you should never negotiate with terrorists, Israel actually does that. That behavior has kept casualties to a minimum. Expecting more is unrealistic and very few countries would take the long road here.
To keep casualties to a minimum in any future conflict, there needs to be a push by Palestinians to condemn terrorist attacks or similar reactions will be a necessity.
Israel has been doing what you're saying for decades. Yet they now got even bigger attack.
What do you believe it says? I think by total numbers underline that the side with more military capability does show restraint. Most conflicts are way shorter with way more deaths.
Since 2000 there were over 10,000 rockets fired at Israel. It is not because of the lack of trying that casualties in Israel are that low.
The lie that spread so much and propagated through the western news outlet. So I wouldn't have that trust if I were you.
[1] https://checkyourfact.com/2023/10/12/fact-check-did-hamas-be...
"While we continue to collect information, our current assessment, based on analysis of overhead imagery, intercepts and open-source information, is that Israel is not responsible for the explosion at the hospital in Gaza yesterday,” Watson said in a statement on Wednesday." https://edition.cnn.com/2023/10/18/politics/us-intel-gaza-ho...
So most likely Palestinian misfire, which won't be the first time btw. Also the 500 death count is quite likely way more than the real number of casualties.
[1] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MYF8MyRhKDY
Don't the rest of us have imagery.
Laws of war state that civilians and medical personnel (the persons with the crosses on their helmets and uniforms who take oaths to do no harm) are not to be fired upon unless they are firing upon you.
When the laws of war apply, the chain of command is searched for the parties that can and should have sufficient evidence of their operations to prove their case.
Whether or not the laws of war applied, there is prosecution for war crimes (once we return to rational cost reduction and equal due process).
https://twitter.com/MyLordBebo/status/1714359458967466235
https://twitter.com/jconricus/status/1714376318136021443
Now if you could go back in time and prevent the invention of Photoshop and AI, I could believe anything I see in 2023.
Without and proof whatsoever I place the blame on Israel, Hamas, and Elvis. It was a 3-way collaboration.
I am 100% certain that I have as much credible evidence in this as anyone else does for their position.
No offense to my friends who are still influenced by video "proof."
idf supposed to share : uav footage from above and call intercepts discussing "oopsie". there is also some radar data
Al Jazeera Arabic video shows a point of view from al wafa medical towards Netivot (so eastward), and the failed rocket is flying initially northward, and was not fired from the sea at all, unlike the other video.
https://www.reddit.com/r/Palestine/comments/17au0zk/israel_f...
https://twitter.com/aja_palestine/status/1714599303862157797... https://twitter.com/aja_palestine/status/1714556376297398483...
I mean accidents can happen, but anyone thinking that hospital that was repeatedly warned, including by shelling, and refused to evacuate regardless, would just be left alone and had an accident the next day with a bomb falling exactly in the middle of the courtyard, just stretches credulity.
Why does one event matter so much to you? I didn't even bring this event up, just expressed my opinion about it.
I'm more concerned with Israel's overall genocidal aggression in Gaza, rather than individual incidents.
https://twitter.com/robertmackey/status/1714374889568911506?...
https://x.com/AJEnglish/status/1714395103966515461
And if hamas had such capabilities, why didn't they use them yet, huh?
And we don't know what capabilities yet, we still don't know what happened.
> Since when can civilians on the ground know where the rocket that hit them came from?
And you replied:
> there are photos/videos now. a dozen of burned cars on parking lot. hospital is in one piece. all walls/roofs/etc are intact.
I don't see how your reply answers the question of where the rocket came from, just what you think the rocket hit.
https://threadreaderapp.com/thread/1714390254935851272.html
and no, it's not weird. it's common on ycombinator.
in general i find it troubling that statement by hamas taken by everybody at face value, without ask for any proofs (besides 20 sec footage of something burning and 30 sec of doctors taking care of somebody somewhere there was absolutely nothing backing 500 dead and more under rubble). on the other side when idf publishes videos, photos, call intercepts, radar plotes, etc; it's "well, IDF has history of killing people and lying. we will reserve our judgement till we will see this confirmed by independent investigation".
Both sides have a history of "the other side has a history of killing people and lying, we will reserve our judgement". BOTH sides have a history of killing people and lying about it. But then on both sides there are a lot of innocent people being killed regardless.
there was entertaining thread on reddit a few days ago, where people were searching for "widely documented mass rapes by idf". the only documentation going back to statements from 1969 or so. after this everybody were split into 3 camps: - very good in coverup (kinda impossible given amount of human rights organizations that document everything)
- idf dehumanizes palestinians so idf is repulsed from idea of rape
- idf actually has some moral backbon
Especially when we have the live footage from al Jazeera of a failed launch followed by an explosion at the same time as the hospital explosion.
Here is the actual attack: https://twitter.com/WarMonitors/status/1714337776873640216
Find me any other Hamas rocket that does that much damage. Especially when broken up and falling to the ground.
Go find physical evidence of a Hamas rocket doing the amount of damage that was done to the hospital.
This one seems to make a fairly significant blast, and that's one of the shorter range ones.
Plus assuming most of the fuel is still intact since the rocket misfired it could easily generate a 2-3x bigger explosion.
And from the photos it's seems like the explosion at the hospital was about the size of 1-2 cars as well, so fairly similar imo.
And lastly, the explosion at the hospital seems to be ground level, airburst would be higher above the ground.
Anyway, so far the experts who agreed to talk claim it doesn't look like an Israeli rocket explosion
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-67144061
Airburst can happen wherever the fuse is designed to activate.
Here: https://twitter.com/BowesChay/status/1714654233847288050
Direct comparison of a JDAM and the hospital attack.
Maybe, but if you are using airburst it doesn't make much sense to activate it at ground level since it defeats the purpose.
And again, the pictures taking during the day light show very little damage - the surrounding buildings are fully intact, so a JDAM just isn't likely, airburst or not.
Seems more like a fuel tank that blew up causing more fire type damage than anything.
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2023/oct/18/al-ahli-arab-h...
Channel 4 did an investigation and as expected the IDF bombed the hospital.
https://x.com/Lowkey0nline/status/1714775482283991172
In 2006, Hamas was fielding kit that could loft 17 kg of explosives [1]. Given the rocket is 66kg, that's a 25% payload fraction implying at least another 33kg of fuel at launch.
Solid fuel should deflagrate. But it looks like they historically used a sugar/KNO3 premix [2]. I think that could detonate when strapped to an explosive while encountering terrain. Add to that pressurized systems commonly found in a hospital, e.g. oxygen, and the deadliness of a collapsing building, and I can see their circa 2006 kit doing the job.
(Note: this is a back-of-the-envelope plausibility check only.)
[1] https://handwiki.org/wiki/Engineering:Al_Quds_3
Sure. But those are precision munitions. I don't think there's an Occam's razor solution through this bit of the fog of war. (Yes, I know I'm deflecting from the horrors on the ground by thinking about the rocket mechanics. I'm going to try to observe my plane crash rule of ignoring attribution hypotheses for at least one week after.)
Speaking of fog of war, the IAF could easily release logs of sorties flown, ammo taken, ammo used, and where it was used. They could do that right now. They have not. Makes you think.
It's an active war zone. There are good tactical reasons for not immediately disclosing this. (You also want to make damn sure that you didn't have a trigger-happy racist go off piste.) Conducting that audit credibly takes time.
Anyone arguing bombing a hospital at this time in this way furthered either side's strategic aims is missing context. This was a fuckup. To what degree, and at what level, is largely what's being lost or obscured.
https://twitter.com/CensoredMen/status/1714355342987948106
Edit: also check the footage the Israeli intelligence guy posted. Tell me that whistle you hear before impact truly sounds like a piece of falling debris.
Strategic? What exactly is the strategic goal of Israel? And how is that accomplished by starving Gaza and cutting off electricity and water? Or the wanton destruction of Gaza? The cruelty is the point and this was no fuckup.
One can't presume to know this. Not with soldiers' lives at stake. Also, there is real risk of regional conflagration. How an air force generates and sustains sorties is closely guarded, even in peacetime, for good reason.
First, you'd scrub the information. Second, you'd weigh whether it's absolutely exonerating. Absent both conditions, it doesn't make sense to release those data.
> What exactly is the strategic goal of Israel?
Removing the ability of a hostile neighbor to project power into their territory. Currently, the chosen route appears to be decapitation. Eliminating the government in Gaza so it cannot wage war.
To do that, Israel--a small country--has to maintain a web of regional and international support. Bombing a hospital might serve tactical aims à la total war. (There are zero cases of bombing a population into submission. The historical precedent is it strengthens resolve. Nevertheless, I mention it for completeness.)
Unless Israel can credibly show this was done by Hamas, it has already lost more than it could have ever hoped to have gained by bombing a hospital. Even if it were smack over an Islamic Jihad weapons depot or whatever.
> how is that accomplished by starving Gaza and cutting off electricity and water
It denies the enemy the capacity to organize and wage war. I'm not ignoring the humanitarian effects. Just noting that power plants have been legitimate military targets for ages, and water supplies since time immemorial.
There was already a bunch of evidence shown, i'd wait 24/48 hour for legitimate press to go over and verify it and come to a conclusion.
also, it was 500 1min after it happen (very quick count), then it went down to 40 and then it went up again. don't forget those numbers are provided by hamas
Apparently:
- there are several plumes of smoke from previous explosions/bombings in that general direction of the hopsital (about 3 that I can count)
- failed rocket seems to be exploding in the sky (maybe engine? maybe both engine and warhead? that's not apparent)
- there's also another explosion a second before the direct hit
- the video is shot in the direction of that hospital (based on el wafa medical building in lower left)
So, yeah. That much is apparent.
Where you "apparently" see Islamic Jihad in the video is really not clear to me.
"You use apparently to indicate that the information you are giving is something that you have heard, but you are not certain that it is true." [1]
https://www.collinsdictionary.com/dictionary/english/apparen...
Sure I never verified what he told.
He just fits my way of thinking about the world.
https://www.reddit.com/r/Palestine/comments/17a72w3/a_video_...
Here's the website:
https://afedj.org/institution/ahli-arab-hospital-gaza-city/
Pretty nice place, it seems.
Macabre as it may sound, it might not really matter who is responsible, people have made up their minds. Doesn't help any victim in the end.
https://twitter.com/Osinttechnical/status/171452559087357560...
https://twitter.com/IDF/status/1714513625598021868?s=20
https://twitter.com/osinttechnical/status/171453568707091698...
https://x.com/FSBRG/status/1714609431877431713?s=20
btw, map of rockets that failed to make it out of gaza https://i1.wp.com/www.theyeshivaworld.com/wp-content/uploads...
https://twitter.com/WarMonitors/status/1714337776873640216
did you ? how many people experienced it ?
Sounds very similar.
Discuss.