March 29 (Reuters) - The Israeli military said on Sunday it had found no negligence or ethical ‌failures by officers involved in the killing of ‌Israeli farmer Ofer Moskovitz near the Lebanese frontier earlier this month.

The ​head of Israel's Northern Command said on March 23 that Israeli forces had misfired artillery, killing 60-year-old Moskovitz, an avocado farmer from the town of Misgav Am.

The ‌military had initially attributed ⁠the incident to cross-border fire from Lebanon.

"The inquiry found that the fire was carried ⁠out during an operational incident providing close support to the maneuvering forces," the Israeli military said in a ​statement.

"It also ​determined that the error ​resulted from a convergence ‌of several operational factors and non-optimal firing conditions. Alongside this, no negligence was found, nor was any ethical failure identified among those involved in the firing process within the artillery unit."

The military said the head of ‌its ground forces had ordered ​the introduction of a stricter operational ​directive addressing artillery ​fire over civilian communities and infrastructure.

Israel has ‌launched a major ground assault ​and air campaign ​in Lebanon against Hezbollah, the Iran‑backed group that began firing into Israel on March 2, two ​days after the ‌start of U.S.-Israeli strikes on Iran.

(Reporting by Hatem ​Maher and Muhammad Al Gebaly; Editing by ​Susan Fenton and Ros Russell)