The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) on Friday said two officers involved in a deadly strike on the World Central Kitchen (WCK) in Gaza, killing seven workers on a food delivery mission, had been dismissed.
The findings of an investigation into the Monday killings said the soldiers had mishandled critical information and violated the army's terms of engagement.
The victims — an Australian, three Britons, a US-Canadian citizen, a Palestinian, and a Pole — were killed in three air strikes over four minutes by an Israeli drone. They were said to have run for their lives between their vehicles as the attack was in progress.
An internal Israeli military inquiry found that the drone team who killed them made an "operational misjudgment of the situation."
It said the team had spotted a suspected Hamas gunman shooting from the top of one of the aid trucks they were escorting. The brigade officers who ordered the strikes, a colonel and a major, were dismissed, while senior commanders were also formally reprimanded.
"The strike on the aid vehicles is a grave mistake stemming from a serious failure due to a mistaken identification, errors in decision-making, and an attack contrary to the Standard Operating Procedures," the military said in a statement on Friday.
The three aid workers' vehicles had been emblazoned with large WCK logos. However, retired Israeli general Yoav Har-Even, who is leading the investigation, said the drone's camera could not see them because it was dark. "This was a key factor in the chain of events," he said.
Demand for more stringent inquiry
WCK said it wanted an "independent commission to investigate the killings," and that the Israeli military "cannot credibly" investigate its own failure.
Poland said it had demanded a "criminal inquiry" by Israel into that it termed the "murder" one it it#s citizens.
"We want [Polish] prosecutors to be added and implicated in the explanations and in the entire criminal and disciplinary procedure for the soldiers responsible for this... murder," Deputy Foreign Minister Andrzej Szejna said.
In the wake of the strikes, US President Joe Biden said he was "outraged." In a tense telephone call late Thursday, Biden told Israeli
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu that future US support for the war in Gaza depended on Israel taking more action to protect civilians and aid workers.
Britain, Canada, and Australia have all condemned the WCK killings and demanded answers from Israel about what happened.