The intention is all that matters. Take the World War II firebombing of Hamburg and Dresden. The goal of these air missions actually was to kill civilians by the hundreds of thousands. Or Hiroshima and Nagasaki, where the goal really was to annihialte entire cities. Why don't we regard these examples (which are of scope and scale thousands of times worse than Israels entire history of targetted killing) as being cases of genocide? The reason is that the bigger intention was not to obliterate a race or a nation, it was to bring an end to wars with horrendous regimes. I say this as a point of comparison, not because I necessarily defend these acts of violence.
There is definitely a case to answer that both of those were war crimes. Certainly by modern standards they would be indefensible.
But even if intent didn't matter, you'd still have no case. Please show me the articles that report that Israel is constantly carelessly tossing bombs around, indifferent of the collateral damage. The Israeli military seeks to destroy military targets. As in every conflict this can lead to collateral damage. It should be noted that when armed Hamas forces hide in schools or use human shields as protection, it is they who are magnifying the likelyhood of collateral damage. If Israel had the means to kill only military targets there is no doubt they would use these means.
If the enemy are hiding in a school, you don't shoot at them. That's been part of the RoEs for every civilised military for decades now. Yes, that means you might get shot, but it also means you don't shoot civilians. Soldiers sign up to be shot at; civilians don't. There are certainly times in urban operations 'amongst the people' that you miss mortars, air strikes and artillery, but that's the price you pay for being a professional soldier and claiming to be the good guys.
I wasn't actually looking for those articles, but in the course of looking for a graphic I came across
this:
American officer in article said:
"I'm not sure what the issue is. In 2006 and 2008, it was pretty clear the IDF's combined armed skills – their ability to integrate artillery and air power into ground campaigns – had atrophied since the withdrawal from Lebanon in 2000. But I don't know whether the issue remains poor training, a lack of forward observers talking to the artillery batteries and aircraft, or commanders who just don't think avoiding civilian casualties is a priority."
"When a stray shell killed 23 Palestinian civilians, including nine children, in Beit Hanoun in northern Gaza in November 2006, it was found it was caused by a faulty programming card in a counter-battery radar system, called Shilem, designed to track an enemy projectile's trajectory back to its point of origin and direct artillery fire back at that spot. The inquiry also found that the artillery crew had not recalibrated their weapons overnight and did not have spotters monitoring whether their fire was accurate, so 12 to 15 artillery shells were fired before it was realised they were hitting an apartment complex. It is not clear what changes the IDF made to its targeting methods as a result."
That sounds like callous negligence at best to me.
Compare that to the Palestinians, who have a shocking history of targeting non-combatants. Yet Israel is simply held to a different standard.
If you're going to portray yourself as a civilised country fighting against terrorists then I think you ought to be held to a different standard!
While the Palestinians have shot rockets into residential areas, butchered Jewish teenagers, blown themselves up in buses and restaurants etc., the collateral damage done by the Israeli military when targeting military goals, which is often a result of the human shield practise, causes such outrage that people go so far as to call it genocide.
It seems that the militants (I dislike the implication that all Palestinians are 'the enemy') are much more precise at targeting soldiers with their rockets, bombs and butcherings than the Israelis.
80% of the Palestinians who have been killed in Gaza were civilians, so that means that Israel kills four civilians every time it kills a soldier. Since 2009 (not counting Cast Lead) 58 Israelis have been killed by the violence in Gaza, of whom 42 were civilians, making 72%. During Cast Lead itself, 10 soldiers were killed for 3 civilians. So not only are the Israeli military doing
worse for collateral damage than the 'terrorists' they oppose, they're also killing at a different order of magnitude.
EDIT: I didn't realise that Protective Edge is also a Gaza conflict - there we have 5 Israeli civilians killed for 66 soldiers.