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Well I have, a few survived to tell the tale, I didnt say army I said military. RAF bomber crews were killed by civilians and others were killed after being handed over to military authorities. Once they were dubbed "terror fleigers" by German propaganda, observation of the rules of war were forgotten.They were hoping to land critical hits anywhere possible , especially considering the closing speed
Ι have never read bomber crews executed by official army. I do have read that individual bomber crews members were killed by German civilians
In 1940, during the Battle of Britain Dowding considered it legitimate for a LW pilot to shoot an RAF pilot in his parachute, because he could rejoin the fight within hours. He considered a LW pilot in his parachute to have surrendered, because he was over UK land and would be captured, therefore he said it was not legitimate to shoot at him. Dowding also wanted LW pilots to be captured,, the info provided was worth the cost of their detention.Cold-bloodedly, shooting the pilot in the cockpit is quite sensible: in the short term, they're difficult to replace. Shooting them after they've bailed out is like machine-gunning sailors in lifeboats, and would be immoral.
Would anyone think it's somehow wrong to shoot a tank commander with his head out or, harkening back to the age of sail, officers on the quarterdeck?
About the jet pilots it s referred in many sourcesWhat is you source that Americans particularly wanted to kill the pilots?
Civilians ships equipped with guns and carrying war materials are not civilians ships any moreI have more than 50 years of reading on WWII aviation and, though all sides did occasionally shoot parachuting pilots, it was generally reserved for enemy pilots who had done the same first. That is, I have never heard that Americans went "headhunting" in any widespread manner. I also have never heard the Germans did it as a matter of policy. The only exception to that generally acknowledged was "unrestricted submarine warfare" against civilian ships which, though not exactly good, was not as bad as shooting pilots in parachutes. The sailors at least usually had lifeboats and/or life jackets, and had a chance if they survived the torpedo explosion.
Any pow before his capture is firing at his future captors. Should then all pows to be executed?Shooting someone's parachute removes or greatly reduces the chances for survival.
Any German pilots who were executed by American ground forces were generally the ones who had just strafed the people who captured them and caused casualties
Then the Germans could justify themselves for the execution of US pows in Ardennes offensive by not having the fuel to send them in prisoner camps?or were captured in the middle of an action where taking POWs was simply not feasible.
I am not judging. I don't know how I would behave in such terrible circumstances.As a nation, we were raised to play fair, and execution does not fit that notion very well. Germans in general were also raised to be civilized. I'm guessing most of the executions on the German side were directed by the SS, not the average German soldier or airman. I know and have known several people who were captured by Germans in WWII and were treated reasonably well. I know couple of Germans who were captured by Americans in WWII and were treated reasonably well.
The Luftwaffe didn't exactly avoid executing American pilots. But both sides were more likely to do it much later in the war than earlier in the war. Several years of seeing war's brutality can make anyone a bit jaded. It's can be hard to think of treating people you capture well if your home has just been destroyed and your family has just been killed by the people you capture. That goes for ANY side.
Doesn't make it right or in any way justifiable, but it IS along the lines of human nature.
About the jet pilots it s referred in many sources
Having been told "it is clear" why dont you accept that "it is clear"? Maybe you are like me, once someone tells me something is "clear" with no evidence at all I think things are not clear at all and have been made up.I've asked you earlier, and will ask again, could you provide these to us?
Dedalos,But it is clear that, especially the Americans , wanted the pilots netrualized. Its clear that they kept shooting at German fighters long after it was clear that it was going down. Even as the pilot was trying to bail out
Even after in their parachutes they were not safe. It was a standard practice for German pilots ,later in the war, to open their parachutes as late as possible to avoid the American escort fighters. Many survived the jump only to be strafed on the ground. It takes some time to free yourself from the parachute
And we all know that there was as an official policy to execute the jet pilots.
A few German fighter pilots were even captured and executed by American ground forces
On the German side, I only know sporadic cases of parachute shooting. Eg a pilot in north Africa, a couple on the eastern front etc
Both RAF and LW were attacking the rescue boats on the channel front
I don't judge. Who am I to judge?Dedalos,
I'm going to have to challenge your bolded comments.
Have you ever shot down a plane? Coincidentally enough, most of the guys in WW2 hadn't either until the first time. And then only one doesn't make you a pro at it. Put yourself in a fighter, you get into a fight, and by luck or skill end up in a shooting position on an enemy aircraft. Your adrenaline is through the roof, you are scared shitless that an unobserved guy is going to get you, and you want to make sure this plane / target goes down.
In the F15 we talked about getting engaged (into a fight) with a single and how much ordnance you would expend. There were quite a few guys who used the "friends of industry" mentality or would way over shoot at a guy as it might be your only chance during a career. I flew the Eagle for 17 years, did five rotations to the Middle East in it, and the closest I came to any bad guy was 23 miles, and lucky for him he stayed on his side of the line. He was the only one in 106 combat missions that got inside range of my weapons.
There is also a phenomenon known as target fixation in which you can become so focused on a target that you miss or fail to observe something going on in close proximity. Have you seen one of those video clips where you are asked what happened, and you realize you missed the guy dressed like a gorilla who walked right through the middle of the skit? It happens and it happens a lot.
I have read where all sides gunned guys in chutes with no one side seeming to stand out.
Be careful judging what the man in the arena is doing when one has never set foot there.
And if I were to cast dispersions upon a side, I might lean towards the one that tried extermination of a particular group, or one that was defensive, who was routinely getting the crap bombed out of them, and was retreating or giving up their homelands.
Biff
Hard to say what you mean by early in the war. At the beginning it was fought almost exclusively by rifle calibre guns. The British switched to 20mm cannon in 1941. Early American planes had a mix of rifle and 50 cal guns. The rate of fire of the 50 cal was increased and the number of guns carried was increased, the destructive fire power of a P-47 with 8 x 50 cal was much more than twice that of an early P-40, same for a Typhoon with 4 x 20mm cannon. Additionally the gyro gunsight advised the range to open fire based on the wing span of the target which the pilot input. This means that the gun sight was guiding to pilot to open fire at the mid point between the wing tips, which is where the cockpit is on a S/E fighter. If a pilot was attacking a bomber box when he bailed out I would say he was well advised to wait until near the ground before deploying the parachute, the space was alive with bullets, most of which did not hit what they were aimed at but would be inclined to hit something, especially something slowly floating down.I don't judge. Who am I to judge?
I just study history and I report without motives
Auswitz did exist, Dachau did exist, the execution of US prisoners during the Ardennes offensive did happened. These are facts
But it s also a fact that Americans, were attacking some times the German parachutists.
I provided a small list of names.
German pilots like Hofman, reschke, sinner, and many others reported that later in the war was standard practice to open the parachute at the last moment. I am sorry but it's a fact. Its reported by many
And it's the statistics. Being shot down earlier in the war had a 30-40% death rate. Later in the war, 80% of the shot down German pilots were dead. The War Diary of jg26,that covers the entire war day by day, is an excellent read. Demonstrates the changes in tactics, in aircraft, in casualty patters. And also has a comment about pachute shooting
I don't judge. Who am I to judge?
I just study history and I report without motives
Auswitz did exist, Dachau did exist, the execution of US prisoners during the Ardennes offensive did happened. These are facts
But it s also a fact that Americans, were attacking some times the German parachutists.
I provided a small list of names.
German pilots like Hofman, reschke, sinner, and many others reported that later in the war was standard practice to open the parachute at the last moment. I am sorry but it's a fact. Its reported by many
And it's the statistics. Being shot down earlier in the war had a 30-40% death rate. Later in the war, 80% of the shot down German pilots were dead. The War Diary of jg26,that covers the entire war day by day, is an excellent read. Demonstrates the changes in tactics, in aircraft, in casualty patters. And also has a comment about pachute shooting
I decided to provide a small list of German pilots shot in their parachutes.You still haven't provided a source for your claim that it was official policy for American pilots to shoot German jet pilots in parachutes on sight and as a matter of orders, so I'm calling bullshit on that.
Don't believe the USAAF did that more often than anyone else.About the jet pilots it s referred in many sources
In several German pilots memories is referred that later in the war they were trained to deploy their parachutes as late as possible
I am only an amateur , but I will make a small list with a few known pilots shot in parachute or strafed on ground
RAF did it very rarely, as often as LW, USAAF was another story
Civilians ships equipped with guns and carrying war materials are not civilians ships any more
Unrestricted submarine warfare was practiced by all combatants.
Any pow before his capture is firing at his future captors. Should then all pows to be executed?
Then the Germans could justify themselves for the execution of US pows in Ardennes offensive by not having the fuel to send them in prisoner camps?
I am not judging. I don't know how I would behave in such terrible circumstances.
Additionaly the crimes of Germany are counted in millions. There's no balance in crimes. German prisoners died by thousands in allied prisoner camps but soviet pows died in millions in German camps.
We must remember every crime , and not repeat it.
But we do.
Interesting list "from another forum" that is quite suspect. People couldn't keep the details of air combat straight in their minds but, in the heat of air combat, pulling too many g's, they could identify a plane going down and notice who was in the parachute?A small list found on another forum
I decided to provide a small list of German pilots shot in their parachutes.
The fact that jet pilots were especially targeted is at the memoirs of every me262 pilot that we have knowledge. Today it s common knowledge. Probably dont exist written orders to prove it, but the facts are very clear