Violations of the Geneva Conventions constitute a war crime, but given how broad they can be that's something basically every power in every war does. The most clear cut example I can think of in this war is that there's been evidence (often from the perpetrators themselves) of both sides executing prisoners taken on the battlefield rather than making them prisoners of war.
Violations of the Geneva Conventions constitute a war crime, but given how broad they can be that's something basically every power in every war does. The most clear cut example I can think of in this war is that there's been evidence (often from the perpetrators themselves) of both sides executing prisoners taken on the battlefield rather than making them prisoners of war.