What is a 'double tap,' and why has Israel's use of it outraged so many?

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Israel bombed a Gaza hospital, waited 7 minutes and then bombed it again, killing people who rushed to help. It's not the first time that has happened.
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It has become an all-too-familiar scene: first responders, medics and journalists rushing to the site of an Israeli attack. But this time, as they rallied to a shattered stairwell at Nasser Hospital bearing stretchers and cameras, Israel struck again — compounding the scene of carnage and enveloping those trying to aid and document.

Global outcry mounted Tuesday over this “double tap” strike on Gaza’s largest remaining medical center, which was caught on video by the Arabic-language channel Al Ghad TV and others who were recording rescue efforts from the first missile when the second struck.

At least 20 people were killed, including five journalists who had worked for various outlets, including The Associated Press, Reuters and Al Jazeera.

On Tuesday, the Israeli military announced it had concluded an initial investigation of the incident, which Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu earlier called a “tragic mishap.”

U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres demanded an independent inquiry into the Israeli strike, while President Donald Trump said he was “not happy about it.”

Trump’s Middle East envoy Steve Witkoff said on Tuesday that the conflict in Gaza could be resolved by the end of the year.

"We think that we’re going to settle this one way or another, certainly before the end of this year. Hamas is now signaling that they’re open to a settlement," Witkoff told Fox News’ Bret Baier.

He added, "We’ve got a large meeting in the White House tomorrow, chaired by the President, and it’s a very comprehensive plan we’re putting together on the ‘next day’ that I think many people are going to be — they’re going to see how robust it is and how it’s, how well-meaning it is, and it reflects President Trump’s humanitarian motives here."

Israel has barred Western news organizations from entering Gaza, save for occasional tours chaperoned by the Israel Defense Forces, leaving them to rely on Palestinian journalists inside the enclave. The Committee to Protect Journalists, a New York-based nonprofit press freedom group, says 192 journalists have been killed during the war and 90 more have been detained in what it describes as “the most horrific attacks the press has ever faced in recent history.”

Palestinians inspect the site of Israeli strikes on Nasser Hospital where Reuters contractor was killed, in Khan Younis
Rescuers work to recover the body of Palestinian cameraman Hussam al-Masri, who was a contractor for Reuters, after he was killed along with others in strikes on Nasser Hospital. The image is taken from a video shot by Reuters contractor Hatem Khaled, who was wounded shortly afterward in another strike while he was recording the site.Hatem Khaled / Reuters

What is it?

This is not the first time Israel has conducted a “double tap” strike, hitting the same target twice in quick succession.

Double-taps have been deployed deliberately in the past by terrorist groups such as Al Qaeda and Nigeria’s Boko Haram, which would send second suicide bombers to kill those trying to help victims of the first ones.

The phrase “double tap” is not an official legal term and does not appear in the Geneva Convention, but intentionally striking people known to be “protected persons,” such as medics, “implies the allegation of a war crime,” said Janina Dill, a professor at the University of Oxford, in England, and co-director of the Oxford Institute for Ethics, Law and Armed Conflict.

Palestinians inspect the site of Israeli strikes on Nasser Hospital where Reuters contractor was killed, in Khan Younis
A man holds the equipment Palestinian cameraman Hussam al-Masri used at the site of the Israeli strikes Monday.Hatem Khaled / Reuters

“The tactic of double-tap strikes is irreconcilable with the conduct of a professional, legally advised and trained military force,” Dill told NBC News, and no such “fighting force should be reasonably accusable of double-tap strikes.”

The “larger moral issue,” she said in an email, was that it was “particularly pernicious to exploit individuals’ willingness of discharging their moral duties of rescue (helping those affected by the first strike) in order to kill them.” She added that “double-tap strikes therefore do not only imply that a war crime is committed, but the tactic should also be reviled and morally condemned.”

Few if any militaries admit to using double-tap strikes as an overt tactic, and Israel is not the only country alleged to have done so. In 2012, the Bureau for Investigative Journalism found that from 2009 to 2012, CIA drone strikes in Pakistan killed at least 50 civilians “in follow-up strikes when they had gone to help victims.”

Last month, the left-leaning Israeli publication +972 Magazine published an investigation, including interviews with Israeli security sources, that found double-tap strikes had become “standard procedure in Gaza” during the war.

In a statement on X, the IDF said an initial inquiry found that troops had identified a camera at the hospital "that was being used to observe the activity of IDF troops, in order to direct terrorist activities against them." It added that "troops operated to remove the threat by striking and dismantling the camera."

The statement, which did not address the second strike on the facility, also said the chief of the general staff had ordered an investigation of "several gaps," including the "authorization process" before the bombing, including for the ammunition used and the timing.

Second, the probe will examine the "decision-making process in the field."

‘Clouded with dust’

Israel’s Haaretz newspaper reported that in the attack Monday, an IDF tank fired at what troops suspected was a Hamas surveillance camera on the roof of the hospital and followed with another to ensure it was hit.

A senior Hamas official told NBC News that the group was not operating a camera in the vicinity of the hospital.

“If this claim was true, there are many means to neutralize this camera without targeting a health care facility with a tank shell,” Bassem Naim, a member of the group’s political bureau, said, noting that if there was a camera, the IDF could have contacted the hospital staff to ask it to take it down.

The first strike, just after 10 a.m. local time (3 a.m. ET), hit the upper floors of Nasser Hospital, where doctors, patients and trainees were in the operating department, according to the hospital’s director, Dr. Mohammed Zakout.

At the time, a number of journalists were climbing the stairs, as they often did, to get a signal to file their reports and contact their families, according to witnesses. Killed in that initial strike was Reuters cameraman Hussam Al-Masri, who the news agency said was operating a live TV shot on the hospital’s upper floors at the time.

Hatem Omar, 42, was one of the journalists who then rushed to the scene. “I climbed the staircase; a large number of journalists and medics were with me on the stairs,” he told reporters. “Then the second strike happened.”

Journalists killed in an Israeli strike on Gaza's Nasser hospital.
Journalists killed in an Israeli strike on Gaza's Nasser hospital. From left, clockwise: Hussam al-Masri, Ahmed Abu Aziz, Mohammad Salama, Mariam Dagga and Moaz Abu Taha.via Reuters

Ibrahim al Qanan, who was live on Al Ghad TV when it recorded the second strike, said timestamps on the video showed that there was 7 minutes between explosions. Responders waited a few minutes after the first hit before they raced up the stairs, he said, only to be caught in the second blast.

The video showed eight men on an external stairwell, three wearing orange high-visibility vests, one a yellow helmet and one carrying a camera. A few of them were gesturing to someone off-camera when the image filled with smoke and debris, accompanied by a loud bang and screams. Dozens of people then began running from the scene, now bathed in smoke.

“I witnessed blood everywhere at the site,” Omar said. “The staircase outside the hospital was filled with medics, filled with civilians, filled with people rushing to help, and the place was clouded with dust.”

“The second blast turned the area into a silent, frozen scene, as if the chests of everyone there had been crushed.”

Outside, the fallen journalists — Hussam Al-Masri, Mariam Dagga, Mohammad Salama, Ahmed Abu Aziz and Moaz Abu Taha — were laid side by side, still adorned with their cameras and blood-spattered vests bearing the word “PRESS.”

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