Tank-ace I just get the feeling you're really starting to push thing beyond belief just for the sake of not giving way, or admitting your analysis isn't correct.
Not to say the German's weren't responsible, but only that their actions didn't directly lead to those death's.
and this is what I can't get at all. FFS, dude, the germans launched the blasted thing to start with. Can any action get more DIRECT than shooting a projectile at the enemy?. You said the allied pilots who died shooting at V-1s caused it because they pulled the trigger...guess what, if there was no V-1 to begin with, they wouldn't have died
-at all-Those V-1s were weapons of war. They were launched by germans, and as such, any pilot killed when trying to bring one down was directly killed because a german hostile action. It's just mental that you try to go around that simple, bassic fact.
There was german hostile involvement directly related to their death. That V1 was there because the germans launched it. No V-1 - no pilot death. You can't get more simpler than that.
hence, they were COMBAT losses. And as a corolary, it's essentially basic to understand that their planes had been in combat.
trying to argue that the pilots died because they shot at the german weapon is, well, excuse me if I sound unpolite because it's not my intention to sound like it and I'm not an english native speaker, but at a loss for a better word to apply, it's a sorry excuse. Those pilots were TASKED and ORDERED to intercept and bring those weapons down, by any means neccesary. Initially by gunfire. When the hazards of firing at a explosive laden V1 became apparent, Wingtipping was developed. But those pilots sortied had a combat task. That the weapon wasn't aimed at them doesn't mean they weren't in combat.
Please take the following example, that actually happened in WWII. USS Hamman, Sims class DD tasked with tending and helping the USS Yorktown damage control efforts to bring the wounded carrier back to Pearl after the battle of Midway. A japanese submarine shot four torpedoes at the USS Yorktown. Two missed, one hit the Yorktown and another one hit the Hammann which essentially was blown out of the water. The torpedo was intended for the carrier, yet the DD ate it. The 80 sailors who died in that event didn't die as a result of a combat action?. Because according to you those guys are nothing else but "battle casualties" given that the torpedo wasn't aimed nor intended to hit their ship to start with. Guess their status as KIA has been wrong for 70 years now.
More examples. Take my first post proposal here. A ticonderoga shooting SAMs at a bunch of missiles aimed at the carrier she's protecting. Is the Ticonderoga in combat? The missiles aren't aimed at her, are they?. under your standards, the Tico wouldn't be in combat in that scenario.
Yet another instance. A naval escort (say, a OHP Frigate) using chaff to confuse enemy radar guided ASM missiles so they don't hit the ship she's escorting. Chaff is sucessfull in deviating one ASM from the main target but instead the missile locks into the frigate, which gets hit instead (quite a plausible outcome of a chaffing effort by an escort ship) causing dozens of dead and injured and wrecking the ship that sinks afterwards. Was that escort hit in combat? the missile wasn't aimed at her initially ,was it?. Had the escort not launched chaff, the missile wouldn't have deviated from it's initial course and would've hit other ship, right?. Then you're trying to argument that in that scenario the escort wasn't in combat, so the ship is not a combat loss, and the deaths aboard caused by the missile would not be combat losses either. "Battle casualties"...do you think -that- is a correct assessment of the situation and outcome of such a scenario?
well, neither it is in the case of the pilots that intercepted V1s.
Finally, you don't fire a gun in anger if there is no combat involved. Those pilots indeed fired their guns in anger, and hence, another corolary , it's essencially basic to understand that they, and their planes, had to be in combat to do so.