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| Movies, Television & Video Topics related to WWI aviation movies, documentaries, television, and other videos etc. |
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View Poll Results: Should Guynemer have spared Udet in their dogfight?
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Yes, it was right not to shoot down an unarmed man.
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10 |
32.26% |
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No, war is hell, and he should've hosed Udet.
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13 |
41.94% |
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I think Guynemer's guns were out of action, too.
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7 |
22.58% |
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No opinion
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1 |
3.23% |
24 August 2007, 07:44 AM
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#1
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Two-seater Pilot
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: United States
Posts: 240
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Dogfights, Udet vs Guynemer Poll
We've all heard about the fight between Udet and Guynemer, but seeing it on the History Channel was cool. But it raises a question- should Guynemer have spared Udet? History is 20-20, but one has to wonder, considering Udet would go on to become one of Germany's highest scoring aces. Guynemer quite possibly could've ended it right there.
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24 August 2007, 09:52 AM
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#2
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Forum Ace
Join Date: Feb 2002
Location: NW Florida
Posts: 1,057
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If, as Udet maintained, Guynemer was being chivalrous, nobody knows what his motive was. So who can say whether or not it was the right thing to do?
P.S. .... It was a nice sequence to watch. I thought the aircraft textures looked very good!
__________________
"A surprise attack is much more demoralising than any other form, and generally results in the person attacked diving or pulling the machine into such a position that it forms a most satisfactory target for the few seconds necessary to deliver a decisive blow. " - R. S. Dallas
Last edited by TomVrille; 24 August 2007 at 09:56 AM.
Reason: Add P.S.
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24 August 2007, 10:52 AM
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#3
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Two-seater Pilot
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: United States
Posts: 240
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Yes, this is another "what if" question. I'm just wondering- and no I'm not a cold hearted butcher- but considering how Udet turned out- whether or not taking advantage of any opportunity to shoot down an enemy should be taken.
Do you think this kind of thing would happen in air combat today? Or would one be glad to have the upper hand?
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24 August 2007, 01:11 PM
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#4
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Forum Ace
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: Gallipolis,OH
Posts: 2,376
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I don't think their isn't any air-to-air combat taoday.
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24 August 2007, 03:30 PM
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#5
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Forum Ace
Join Date: Aug 2006
Posts: 1,000
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No, that sort of act wouldn't happen today. I can't imagine the airborne technician of the modern age deciding to show chivalry to a blip and some hieroglyphs on a screen of some object he'll probably never see with his naked eye. There's just no need for mercy in a video game.
__________________
Jan Goldstein
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25 August 2007, 04:07 AM
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#6
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Forum Ace
Join Date: Oct 2002
Posts: 822
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Guynemer was about as hard hearted as they come, or at least that was his public persona. My bet is that if this incident took place as described G.G. had either suffered a jam in his own weapons or he was out of ammunition.
As to whether "chilvalrous" acts could take place in the skies or anywhere else in modern conflict - in my opinion yes, absolutely. Given the right combination of circumstance and the people involved it is as likely today as it ever was (which is to say not very). People have not changed. The scenery is different , same stage.
A highly enjoyable episode of "Dogfights".
__________________
"In the final analysis, war is far more than an extension of politics. It is the most complex, demanding, and unpredictable of all human endeavors - as learned from 1914 to 1918." - from (with slight alteration) the introduction of "Pyrrhic Victory" by Robert A. Doughty (US Army Ret.).
"Frankly, I had enjoyed the war." Adrian Carton de Wiart
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31 August 2007, 03:04 AM
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#7
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Two-seater Pilot
Join Date: Sep 2006
Posts: 200
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Udet
Hi there!
We know NOW how Udet turned out. Guynemer didn't. Moreover, how would he have reacted by the "end" of his career? Would he have been so digusted at seeing his buddies die that he still would have spared Udet's life? I doubt it.
I do believe though that he did spare his life out of chivalry. Many pilots of this period came from aristoctratic families.
However, why he didin't forced him to land in allied territory is beyond me.
Different times, different methods. Numerous pilots of all nations didn't do the same during WWII. Many shot at pilots hanging from their chutes or swimming in the water...
Ciao
Iwik
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31 August 2007, 09:44 AM
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#8
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Forum Ace
Join Date: Feb 2002
Location: Huntsville, AL
Posts: 520
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My take is that Guynemer probably had a jam or problem of some kind himself. Let's face it, there was veeeeeery little chivalry involved in WWI aviation. Many pilots had problems psychologically because in many cases it seemed like cold blooded murder as opposed to war. The idea of diving out of the sun or sneaking up behind an enemy and shooting him down before he knows you're there is part of the Dicta Boelcke but is about as unchivalrous as it gets. Chivalry and the "Knights of the Air" is a concept perpetuated by dramatic writers since the end of the war in order to sell books and has become thought of as fact through the years. I'm sure there was chivarly in the air, but no more or less than on any battlefield anywhere else before or since.
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