As did I!I did!small trivia - how many know that Von Richthofen's younger brother Luther was Germany's fourth highest scoring ace with 40 kills?![]()
And as far as the original question, I would say no.
The guy got to the point where he was rather merciless and ruthless in his fighting.
In fact, that whole core or early aces: Richthofen, Udet, Voss, Lowenhardt were all a bit too bloodthirsty. They flew with a "get the kill at all costs" mentality.
I know that James Franco movie about the Escadrille got a lot of flack (pardon the pun) for its portrayal of the "Evil German pilots," but there was actually a bit of truth in it.
Ironically, the commonly accepted nowadays that the Immelmann really began as a common "last ditch" effort by allied pilots of crippled planes to get away and retreat because the German pilots were gong to shoot them down anyway. In fact, some say it actually had little or nothing to do with Max Immelmann himself at all. He just happened to be in the right place at the right time, sort of speak. (As an interesting side note, the "Immelman" turn used in roller coasters and the like is really a misrepresentation of the maneuver and has little in common with it.)
This all goes to show that, in a lot of ways, when it came to combat tactics, the WWI Germans were a lot more ruthless and "evil" than those of WWII.
I'd even say that the a good portion of the WWII Luftwaffe pilots (At least those not under Goring's direct influence.) were much more "heroic" than those of WWI.
Erich Hartmann for instance, who, IMO, is the best aviator who ever lived, was a fucking hero.
The problem with this thinking is very simple. To be successful at air combat, one had to be, you guessed it, Ruthless! Your opponent certainly is going to be. To approach it any other way is silly. It wasn't Tennis.
Ask any war ace alive today & they to a man will tell you aggressiveness is the key to victory. Hartmann was no more or less a hero than Manfred Von Richthofen. Both Manfred & Hartmann had dinners for their downed opponents before they were sent to prison camp. There is a film of Manfred with a South African Sopwith Pup pilot that gave him a real battle, Manfred was smiling & full of praise for his opponent & obviously pleased he wasn't hurt.