A long writeup on some of the recent events in Warblogging.com, including a questioning of how US forces have been conducting themselves, not just with regards to journalists, but with civilians and allies (err, ally.. the British).

US Army Colonel David Perkins of the 3rd Infantry Division said that Iraqis in front of

the hotel fired rocket propelled grenades across the Tigris River at

main battle tanks quite a way away (reporters say that the tanks were

“more than a half-mile away”). Colonel Perkins said that soldiers

fired a 120mm ruond at the hotel after seeing enemy “binoculars” in the

hotel. The shell hit the 15th floor of the building, killing two journalists and injuring five.

According to reporters there were dozens upon dozens of cameras

arrayed on the balconies of the hotel. “How can they spot someone with

binoculars and not [see] cameras?” asked AP photographer Jerome Delay

who was in the hotel.

Journalists, according to the AP insist that they “heard no

gunfire coming from the hotel or its immediate environs.” They say

that they were watching two US tanks operating across the al-Jumhuriya

bridge — more than a half-mile away — and that at some point one of the

tanks simply rotated its turret towards the hotel and fired.

One of the journalists killed was a Reuters camerman. Reuters responded:

“Clearly the war, and all its confusion, has

come to the heart of Baghdad,” said Reuters Editor in Chief Geert

Linnebank. “But the incident nonetheless raises questions about the

judgment of the advancing U.S. troops who have known all along that

this hotel is the main base for almost all foreign journalists in

Baghdad.”

In Belgium, the International Federation of Journalists said it

appeared noted that on the same day US bombs hit al-Jazeera offices,

Abu Dhabi TV offices and the Palestine Hotel. They said it “appeared

Tuesday’s attacks may have deliberately targeted journalists,” says the AP. Secretary-General Aidan White of the IFJ said “If so, they are grave and serious violations of international law.”

The Committee to Protect Journalists went even further than the IFJ,

saying “We believe these attacks violate the Geenva Conventions. The

evidence suggests that the response of US forces was disproportionate

and therefore violated international humanitarian law,” Reuters reports.

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The Arab Journalists Union also “condemned the Anglo-American attack on journalists while in Baghdad to cover the aggression.”

The Pentagon has responded simply by saying that Baghdad is “not a safe place” and that journalists “should not be there.”