http://www.richthofen.com/

That's exactly what I meant. It was the last of it with the threshold being air combat in WWI. A pilot would sometimes land to greet the defeated, share a story, the then victor would fly off. It was a sport with the possibility of death... In several years humans will not be on the battlefield. You should see all the tech advances. It's mind blowing... Raytheon has completed it's remote operation tech so any any aircraft can be operated from across the globe through its UAS software. A F-16 could enter combat with no human aboard..jarndice wrote:The concept of honour in warfare can produce perhaps not quite the result you desire,
For instance the air assault on Crete by Paratroopers of the Herman Goering division was successful not because they outnumbered the British and New Zealand ground forces,
They most certainly did not,
But because the senior NCOs and junior officers ordered their men not to fire upon the Jumpers as they were considered non-combatants until they landed.I should say that this was ignored by a number of individual soldiers.
Even then it was a Pyrrhic victory for the German armed forces to the point that Mr Hitler ordered General Karl Student to never embark on such a venture again.
One of the reasons the British armed forces train to fight at night is to reduce casualty's but from a personal point of view that does demand a very high level of skills to make it effective. Get it wrong and the opposite result is the outcome and I fear honour on the battlefield is now history and so cannot be relied on or expected.
Shaun.