It was justice for the accused, he was victim of a malicious prosecution.
Whether he was, or not, a victim of a malicious prosecution is hard to say (at least, it is for anyone not blinded by partisan bias).
If I was of a conspiracy-theorist mindset I might wonder if he was chosen because they knew there'd be no evidence for a guilty verdict but it would give the authorities the ability to say to the campaigners "we tried to hold someone to account but an independent court found him not guilty".
But before branding the prosecution "malicious", please consider what the judge said:
He said troops had "
lost all sense of military discipline", as they shot unarmed civilians "
in the back…as they were fleeing from them, on the streets of a British city".
Furthermore, the judge said he had no doubt "
the soldiers who opened fire did so with the intention to kill" – and they "
did not act in lawful self-defence".
And please consider them properly, and actually think about them properly.
Is it really OK for soldiers to shoot unarmed civilians in the back as they were trying to flee from them, intending to kill them, when that was not justified for their own self-defence?
Really?
But my question was not about re-litigating the Soldier F case, it was simply about the general question of whether soldiers should be allowed to get away with murder, prompted by
IMO that case should have never been considered.