Westy:
Yup I agree that the Luftwaffe was going down from 1940 onwards, but the Jagdwaffe itself was getting more powerful until 1944. I agree that the Luftwaffe wasn't able to maintain aerial superiority in any TO from 1942 onwards. But the Jagdwaffe fought against the RAF in the Channel for nearly 2 years inflicting crippling loses them, at very low cost both in machines and pilots. And by 1943 all british Spits were SpitIXs...
Also I only can agree with strategical blunders, but those were from high command not Luftwaffe nor Jagdwaffe themselves.
Even knowing that war was lost, german pilots kept fighting spirit...they had the most experienced aces in the world between them, and a quite good training scheme that was raising a decent number of new pilots of average to good quality. One of the effects of the Big Week was the high pilot loss, so the training had to be accelerated...then the lack of fuel made the program stop at all, changing to frontline training missions...as you know that was the end for the German Jagdwaffe...it turned in a unexperienced force with a high quality coren.Very very far from being enough to stop the allied tide.
But the force itself, the Jagdwaffe,was the finest in the world...not the better strategically deployed,nor commanded (although Galland did all he could to change their leader's blunders),nor numerous...they were the best figher aces in the world, and they knew it.
I have to correct you in a very important thing. Moelders fought in Spain,then in France,then over Britain,anb THEN changed to the East front. I dont know how many of his victories were in the east front but for sure less tan 20, because he died in 1941 in an accident aboard a He111. He got the swords for his knights cross before galland and I think Diamonds too.I give Galland the Number one ranking but by a low margin...Moelders was his equal in all aspects, maybe a little better...but he didnt' survive.
Now Im surprised you dont know know Maj Walther Nowotny. He was one of the finest LW pilots in WWII. He was awarded the Knight Cross of the Iron Cross with Oak Leaves, Swords and Diamonds. A total of 258 victories, 255 in Eastern Front ,3 B-17s with a Me262 while he was the commander of Kommando Nowotny, the first operational squadron of 262 fighers. He was before the commander of I/JG54 also. he was dead in 8-11-1944 when taking off in his me262 in Achmer field. His death was seen there by Adolf Galland so it must be in the book a reference to that day, because Galland had a lot of trust in him.
Now for the others:
Oberstlt. Kurt Buhligen. Top Fw190 ace in the WTO. 112 victories, including victories over Tunis.Survived the war.
Oberstlt. Egon Mayer. High score ace in WTO, also in Fw190.102 victories.
Haupt. Siegfried Lemke. Another 190 ace, also in WTO.95 victories. Also survived war.
Those three above were pilots in JG2Ritchtofen...my squad in AH

.All spent their careers in WFront.
Oberst Josef "Pips" Priller. Arguably the best Fw190 rider in WWII. A total of 101 victories, again all in WFront. He also survived war.
Hope this helped a little.