look at the time codethen you are looking at something different. i mean
look at the time codethen you are looking at something different. i mean
what? i said earlier 'how come the al jeezer vid doesnt show the barrage.' but i was wrong, it does. I dont care if you call it airstrike.So what exactly is your issue with calling those air strikes? you think somehow hamas is THAT incompetent? and their rockets werent visible?
thats not what im calling the al jazeera video. it wasnt filmed by al jazeera like the one taken from gazawhat? i said earlier 'how come the al jeezer vid doesnt show the barrage.' but i was wrong, it does. I dont care if you call it airstrike.
oh. well that's the one al jazeera is using to "prove it's case". i'm never going to remember bam yat or that "H" name. from now on ill say "the tel-aviv camera". cool?thats not what im calling the al jazeera video. it wasnt filmed by al jazeera like the one taken from gaza
That's an unsupported allegation from a state sponsored news outlet: aka, state sponsored disinformation.The only thing thats happening in the area of the hospital is multiple israeli airstrikes in the previous 5 minutes
Thank you, I really appreciate your comments; I'd like to try really hard to knock this down. Another possible thing I'm worried about is that some of the lights of Ashdod may be obscured by terrain. Although it on a coastal plane, and the camera looks quite high. I've lived in Israel, but i didn't spend much time south of tel aviv so dont have a great sense of the topography. Also parts of Ashdod that appear to be populated with houses and other structures may not actually be very bright.That's an unsupported allegation from a state sponsored news outlet: aka, state sponsored disinformation.
I'm not going to do any detailed analysis of your problems with the videos/launch site.
These are some things I suspect may be a problem with your analysis.
-Misidentifying camera positions.
-A problem with interpreting 2D images. See this: https://www.metabunk.org/threads/cl...ured-by-photographer.13182/page-3#post-302869
-Your assumption that the Gaza Strip was completely dark - no electric lights - on October 14 may well be wrong. I think we see the lights of the Al Zahra and Al Mughraqa municipalities in the background. I think you've misidentified those areas.
That was an early speculation. Maybe based on the intercepted conversation.i thought the barrage was from the cemetery next door to the hospital?
kinda.
But this is just immediately falsified by the Bat Yam video. If you believe the faulty rocket theory. For that matter, it's falsified by the al jazeera video itself.This is the updated version:
i was, yes. ok good to know that has flaws. But then what is the actual evidence the object that struck the hospital parking lot, amid a series of israeli airstrikes in the area, originated from gaza?Are you basing that on the analysis of the "Human Rights Investigators" analysis jazz?
That was DOA.
If I have time I'll do an analysis of that.
Quickly:
-This group has no professional standing.
-Their audio analysis is invalid. Problems. Cell phone audio is not accurate. Only two sources of recording when 3 is minimum. Can't do this in urban environment with echoes.
-Their analysis of the crater is invalid. Too many unknown variables. Direction of approach based on marks left on pavement is not valid. They are confounding kinetic energy with explosive energy.
-The rocket body was unstable. We don't know which way it may have been coming from. It could have been launched from the SW but approached from any compass point.
-The explosion is omnidirectional but the unburned rocket fuel would have continued in the same direction the rocket was traveling due to inertia. My best guess is that it was traveling due West, due to where we see the burned cars. On the other hand, there's no evidence of any fire in the green area to the SW of the crater.
An answer to that last point is that the cars may not have been set on fire by rocket fuel. Instead, the cars may have had fuel tanks ruptured by shrapnel. That's one notion.
your video in post #72 al jazeer says themselves that the rocket in the tel-aviv cam came from gaza. (but then they say that isnt the rocket that hit the hospital car park.)Here's a question: what is the actual evidence that the rocket on the al jazeera video actually originated from the Gaza strip?
i imagine that most cars had gas cans in their boots too. i would if my area was at war.Instead, the cars may have had fuel tanks ruptured by shrapnel.
also amid a series of rockets from gaza which even al jeezera says is trueamid a series of israeli airstrikes in the area, originated from gaza?
The fireball was (probably) caused by the rocket fuel.i imagine that most cars had gas cans in their boots too. i would if my area was at war.
the explosion seems really fast and really big all at once though. if cars i would think a series of smaller booms mixed in. no?
The projectile would've been high explosive. The primary shrapnel from even small HE devices can puncture gas tanks and ignite the contents.I can see the relatively low velocity shrapnel puncturing a gas tank, but not blowing it apart like a bullet through a water bottle.
Do you have a link/reference?Moment of explosion at al-Ahli Hospital taken on spot.
View attachment 63696
Moment of explosion at al-Ahli Hospital taken on spot.
View attachment 63696
The remarks "we all have a responsibility to take additional care in the language we use, and to operate on the basis of facts alone", and about misreporting, are almost certainly aimed at the BBC, whose initial reports seemed to assume that the incident was due to an Israeli air strike.External Quote:I also want to say a word about the tone of the debate. When things are so delicate, we all have a responsibility to take additional care in the language we use, and to operate on the basis of facts alone. The reaction to the horrific explosion at the Al-Ahli Arab Hospital was a case in point. As I indicated last week, we have taken care to look at all the evidence currently available, and I can now share our assessment with the House. On the basis of the deep knowledge and analysis of our intelligence and weapons experts, the British Government judge that the explosion was likely caused by a missile, or part of one, that was launched from within Gaza towards Israel. The misreporting of that incident had a negative effect in the region, including on a vital US diplomatic effort, and on tensions here at home. We need to learn the lessons and ensure that in future there is no rush to judgment.
i can see it, but not sure if its a 4 free views thing. Googling the guys name his speech is on Reuters, youtube, twitter etc. if other people want to hear the accent and tone.BBC News- not sure if it's viewable "overseas"?
channel 4 has also done honest reporting on this, so he probably has them in mind tooThe remarks "we all have a responsibility to take additional care in the language we use, and to operate on the basis of facts alone", and about misreporting, are almost certainly aimed at the BBC, whose initial reports seemed to assume that the incident was due to an Israeli air strike.
Brief video of the relevant bit of Rishi Sunak's speech here (BBC News- not sure if it's viewable "overseas"?)
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/av/uk-politics-67196861
Although not giving us any new information to examine, UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak stated yesterday (from 15:38 local time, Monday 23/10/23) that his government believes the Al-Ahli Arab Hospital was "likely" hit by a missile or parts of a missile fired from within Gaza.
Moment of explosion at al-Ahli Hospital taken on spot.
View attachment 63696
This can only mean the video must have been filmed from Ashkelon or somewhere to the 'left'
The claim is that it turned around because of the malfunction. You can actually see it change course, so that's presumably why they went with that explanation. Interestingly there are two other videos that would have captured the object from different angles, but the only publicly available versions end a couple seconds before it would appear.This is basic geometry. If the path of the rocket passes over the hospital, as claimed, then no matter what the perspective...once the rocket has passed a visual point vertically over the hospital then it has flown past the hospital on its flight. It cannot then perform the remarkable feat of flying backwards to hit a point it already passed.
why? the wall street journal vids earlier in thread (post 72?) says the location of that film is here [camera 3]
The claim is that it turned around because of the malfunction. You can actually see it change course
dont gotta tell me. it's a preposterous story. besides that, it is nowhere near the hospital at *any* point in its ascentBut it would have had to not simply 'change course' but completely reverse course. We were told that the path of the rocket went pretty much straight over the hospital. Now if you imagine the whole thing geometrically ( darn....I wish I could do a diagram of it )....if any moving object that is passing over an object passes a line vertically above that object then by definition it has flown past it at that point. When the rocket malfunctions it is waaaaay past that vertical point. The rocket would have to literally turn around and go back the way it came to hit the hospital.
sorry, thought that would make it to the right.Doesn't affect my argument at all. I did say 'or somewhere to the left'....which is precisely where your Cam 3 is.
when things blow up dont the pieces all go in random directions too? either way whether launched from israel or from gaza, missiles dont magically change direction that fast even if they are heat seeking, right? < that's a legit "right?" as i dont really know.From approx. 6 to 10 seconds into the OP video, the aerial object seems to eject vapour in a direction away what we might expect, given its apparent line of flight (not 180 degrees opposite by any means, but counter to its intended course).
I got the impression (seconds 7-8) from the "vapour" that was visible that the object might be spinning in the vertical plane.
Might a chaotically cartwheeling rocket radically change direction?