I'm not required to agree with any of you. Personally I don't think the meteor pilots were in combat. They weren't actively fighting anyone.
Following the letter of the NATO definition of a battle-casualty, they were not battle casualties.
Danny, I respect what you've done for the country, and I respect your squad mate. Try and guilt-trip me all you like, I still don't think firing at an unmanned bomb not aimed at you, and posing no threat to you counts as combat. Theres always going to be ambiguous cases, but those ambiguous cases aren't the rule, they are the exception.
I respect you as a soldier, but your oppinion still doesn't carry enough weight to make me do a 360 on my oppinions.
Tell me, who were the Meteor pilots fighting? The Germans that launched the bombs were in no danger what so ever, and neither were the Meteor pilots (at least not any more than usual, until the instant they pulled the trigger). They weren't shooting at anyone, or anything controlled by a human. The bombs blew up not because of what the Germans did, but because the Meteor pilots were shooting at volatile high-explosives.
Rigged to blow up if something got screwed up with the avionics, or if an aircraft came to close? Sure, cause the Germans were trying to take out anyone who interfered with the bombs. The bomb is aimed at a Meteor, or even a Meteor pilot? Sure, because again, the Germans would be actively trying to take out the meteors.
I'm not saying those pilots shouldn't be recognized for their bravery and sacrafice, but I am saying there shouldn't be just KIA, DWRIA and non-battle-casulaties, as not all of the deaths will fit into one of those three casualties.