Hi,
I have a few moments with internet access so I thought I should let you know what I can tell about my experience so far.
The way up north was a little surreal, I've never seen it so empty. It's not completely dead, though we can't find any place from which to order food - military food gets boring after a short while. Luckily the Arab villages are unaffected so I eat their sweets a lot. Artillery and helicopters are heard constantly outside.
The attack on Qana was apparently a terrible misjudgement of the plane and bomb's approach vector. The plane flew in a straight line over the center of Qana in the direction of the rocket launcher (don't know if you've seen the video, it was presented that same day - the rockets were launched a few dozen meters from the building with the civilians). Apparently the bomb fell a little short, a few dozen meters doesn't give much room for error, and the launcher was already heading back into the village (visible in the video). I'm not sure whether the bomb actually hit the building or that it collapsed because it fell so close, the construction in these regions can be very poor (see the results of that Turkey earthquake). We were very unhappy when we heard the news, the bombing came up in most discussions throughout the day. A junior officer who likes to talk nonsense told a joke about something else, another officer thought he was joking about the bombing and got told him off rather loudly. So I'm glad to say there's not much tolerance for unethical behaviour in my unit. Unethical is just another sub-category of unprofessional IMO. I don't mind people getting emotional, and I joke about everything (I'm not as serious in real life), but people should keep emotions and jokes out of the work we do, misjudgements can mean a disaster.
I'd like to tell you more but I can't for obvious reasons. I can only say that Hizbullah are playing very dirty. For example, when the UN coordinate a safety zone for a convoy, they use it to launch rockets before the UN gives the all-clear, then it's quiet again. We have many such safety precautions that leave very little room for dealing with the rockets, making a ground campaign necessary. I estimate we don't fire back around 90% of the time because of safety limits. It's a shame they don't let a news crew report the way we work, I think it would clear up quite a bit for people abroad.
I'll catch some sleep now, see you soon.