I was wondering how long this would take to get here.
Lets see what the old Army manual says about RPG-7s vs. stationary tanks (this is for an experienced RPG user):
So if the helicopter was standing absolutely still at 700-900m a Soviet RPG master would have a ~3-4% chance of hitting it. Even if they were circling some guy they actually saw had an RPG, they wouldn't feel threatened because it's basically an impossible shot. The helicopter was moving around at 1000m+.
Having said all that, this is a war zone. The guys in that helicopter were not so much trained but whipped up into a frenzy. They were trained to see weapons, so they saw weapons, not cameras. Although they could not tell there were weapons from that distance, and so, you could say, should not have shot, this is a war where anything from a goat to a jug of water can be a threat. When the gunner is wishing for the crawling, heavily wounded man to pick up a weapon, you realise he is totally detached from the reality of ending a life. He just wanted to shoot 'im an insurgent.
The situation we have now really shouldn't justify anything, it's a horrible one in the first place, but you can see how things like this happen.
You really can't justify the van incident. They opened fire on an unarmed civilian who was attempting to give medical aid to a wounded individual. (in this case, a civilian journalist) Even if the wounded person and the man giving aid were confirmed enemy combatants, opening fire on them would have violated the first Geneva convention.You could say that trying to say that the forces in the video were willingly and knowingly engaging civilians is stretching the truth a bit. But oh look, in the longer video they obviously did.
They waste a guy casually walking down the road. They were actually going for the building and the families inside. Someone is in the way, no matter, just shoot through him.
Someone did a nice summing up of the Geneva Protocols on this:
According to the Geneva Protocols, you cannot harm, shoot, explode, murder a wounded enemy combatant. You are also required to
collect that enemy combatant yourself if the enemy cannot and give them medical treatment.
Unarmed medical staff are protected. Killing them is a violation of the laws of war. Additionally, you cannot kill them for not wearing a red cross or a red crescent. They have to shoot at you first, and you have to give them advanced warning that if they do not desist you will fire on them.
These are simply war crimes. And a lot of people are missing the point. The point is that the US government covered this up. Badly. And do with so many incidents like this.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/ ... 7/12/AR2007071202357.html
The Apache crew fired because militants "were endangering the stability of Iraq" and because they had positive identification that the militants "had weapons and were using them against coalition and Iraqi security forces," said Maj. Brent Cummings, the battalion's executive officer. "No innocent civilians were killed on our part deliberately. We took great pains to prevent that. I know that two children were hurt, and we did everything we could to help them. I don't know how the children were hurt."
And this isn't going to be reported to Americans. NBC is owned by the people that make the engine and electronics for the helicopter. (GE) FOX is owned by a Saudi Arabian prince.
CNN? They cut the video off BEFORE the helicopter engages the reporters. They never mention the van, or the children, and they stress how the military has already investigated this and found nobody at fault.
They also throw in Reuters first press release, insisting that Reuters doesn't blame the military either, and that war correspondents jobs are dangerous.
Well whatever, I've said more than enough, probably very badly, but I wanted my 1.31268049p out there. Did I mention the guys authorising the shooting of the various targets did not have any sort of video, only what the people in the helicopter were telling them?
There is a new video btw. The guy helping the wounded in his van was taking his children to school.